Dogs wage war on humans, get first beach in Cyprus

Sick to death of dogs refusing to clean up after their owners, a Cyprus resort has had one of the island's beaches declared Dogs Only in a desperate bid to maintain total pooch privacy.

In Rosevale, Tasmania, it's not unusual to see dogs with driving licences. Pic: tome213
In Rosevale, Tasmania, it's not unusual to see dogs with driving licences. Pic: tome213
August 23, 2008 10:07 AM
By Sarah Ktisti

NICOSIA - Cyprus's popular holiday resort of Ayia Napa has introduced the island's first legal beach exclusively for animals after complaints it was becoming a dog's life for man's best friend.


 Better known for all-night partying by Western tourists, the southeastern resort is now catering for dogs amid growing discontent that pooches had no place to cool off from the sweltering summer heat.


 "We have seen lots of people taking their dogs for a walk since the establishment of the designated area, and we have been inundated by phone calls from happy pet owners thanking and congratulating us for this initiative," said Antonis Tsokkos, mayor of Ayia Napa.


 Walking dogs on beaches has always been a cause for debate in Cyprus. It is prohibited in most areas, and people caught walking their dogs brave open disapproval or even hostility from other beachgoers.


 Tsokkos said the designated area just west of the resort was a temporary one since the area has been earmarked as a yachting marina in future.


 "It is not a problem because there is plenty of space. It will be moved a couple of hundred metres further down," Tsokkos told Reuters.


 The stretch of beach called 'Louma' has from archaic times
being recorded as a place where shepherds would take their
flocks to bathe in the sea, Tsokkos said. 'Louma' means 'bathing'
in the Cypriot dialect.


 "In older times shepherds used to take sheep and goats
there and dunk them in," said Tsokkos.


 Local authorities across the island have been searching for
suitable locations where dogs and their owners can enjoy the
sun and sea without upsetting other beachgoers.


 The need for designated animal beaches hit the headlines in
June when a 50-year-old man and his dog were killed in an
incident believed to have been triggered by the animal's
presence on a beach. A man was arrested after the two were run
over.


 "This initiative has been a long time coming," said Greens
party spokeswoman Ioanna Panayiotou. "The fact that no such
beach existed had caused problems between dog owners and people
who did not want dogs in the area.


 "We believe that there should be a beach for dogs in each
district," she said.

(Reuters Life!)





People Behaving Badly

"There's nowt as queer as folk" said someone once in a suitably heavy rural British accent, no doubt with a wise shake of the head.
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