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Amid General Election Hype…
Are ferrets gaining popularity?
This week has been mainly dominated by the General Election and veterinary issues haven’t featured very prominently in the media at all. However, there have been a few animal-related stories gaining column inches. 

One story that has made headlines is (as The Telegraph puts it): “An animal rescue centre has refused to return a lost dog to the woman who owned it for 11 years after staff sold it on to another family”. The Daily Mail ran with the story also, using the headline: ‘Pet rescue centre refuses to hand back lost dog to widow, saying: 'Sorry, we sold her'’. According to the report from the Telegraph: “Liz Hiorns, 72, searched for days after the Jack Russell, named Penny, went missing from her farm near Warwick. On the advice of a friend she contacted a local vet who dealt with strays and discovered Penny had been sold by an animal rescue centre for £80 to a couple living 30 miles away. Mrs Hiorns, who had the dog since it was a puppy, asked staff at the centre to tell her who had bought Penny, but they refused because it was ''against data protection'' laws.”

This week, the media also featured a case of animal cruelty – a horse trader from Amersham who lost his appeal against his convictions. According to the article on the BBC “James Gray was jailed for six months last June for leaving the animals to starve to death at Spindle Farm in Amersham, Buckinghamshire. His wife Julie Gray, 42, and daughters Jodie, 27, and Cordelia, 21, were also unsuccessful in their appeals at Aylesbury Crown Court.”

Farmer’s Weekly reported another development in the badger culling issue in Wales in a news piece entitled ‘Campaigners in last ditch bid to thwart badger cull’. According to this: “the Badger Trust  has launched a last-minute bid to block the cull of badgers in Wales” and “trust chairman David Williams has now claimed the judicial review judgement could have implications for other wildlife.”

Finally, this week Pete Wedderburn’s blog has picked up on two news pieces: the latest, ‘When good herbivores turn bad…’ refers to the recent revelation that water voles have been spotted eating frogs legs. Within this Pete writes that: “It’s rare for animals to contradict their nutritional background in this way: herbivores generally remain herbivores, and carnivores never willingly stop eating meat. But perhaps these classifications are more man-made than absolute. Cats are obligate carnivores, but they do graze on grass from time to time. Sheep are grass-munching herbivores, but if you’ve ever seen a ewe lambing, you’ll have seen her chomping happily on her own placenta once the delivery is over. Evolution is working away as we speak. Hedgehogs that run away from oncoming cars rather than uselessly curling up into a stationary ball are surviving to breed. Perhaps Water Voles with a taste for flesh are producing more progeny than their more abstemious brothers and sisters.”

Another blog of his asks the question ‘Ferrets: the new celebrity handbag pets?’. He begins this piece by stating “A report published recently suggested that ferret ownership is on the increase, especially amongst female owners, after Paris Hilton was spotted cuddling her pet ferret in public.”

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RCVS announces 1CPD app update

News Story 1
 The RCVS has announced a new version of its 1CPD mobile app, with enhanced features for veterinary surgeons and veterinary nurses to record their continuing professional development.

The mobile app includes a new 'what would you like to do?' shortcut for frequent tasks, a notification badge, and the ability to scan a QR code from the home screen to easily record an activity.

Users will be prompted to update the app from the App Store or Google Play the next time they log in. For more information, visit RCVS.org.uk 

Click here for more...
News Shorts
Nominations open for RCVS and VN Council elections

The nomination period for the 2026 RCVS Council and VN Council elections is now open, with three veterinary surgeon seats and two veterinary nurse seats available.

Prospective candidates can download an information pack and nomination form from the RCVS website. Individuals can nominate themselves for the elections, with the results to be announced in the spring.

Clare Paget, the recently appointed RCVS Registrar and elections returning officer, said: "If you want to play your part in influencing and moulding how the professions are regulated, and making key decisions on matters of great importance to your peers, the public and animal health and welfare, please consider standing for RCVS Council or VN Council next year."

Nominations close at 5pm on Saturday, 31 January 2026.