Published 19:17 IST, June 15th 2020
Noida dog-lover feeds 700 strays daily as lockdown hurts food source
Noticing that stray dogs in his locality have not been getting enough to eat and moved by their plight, the Noida youth took upon the noble task of feeding them
The near three-months-long COVID-19 induced lockdown put 28-year-old Vidit Sharma kept at home after his office closed. Noticing that stray dogs in his locality have not been getting enough to eat and moved by their plight, the Noida based youth took upon the noble task of feeding them.
Street dogs are mostly dependent on leftovers from restaurants, canteens and marketplaces, all of which remained shut in the wake of the pandemic. The situation became grimmer as even people who used to feed the canines daily stopped stepping out of their homes.
So Sharma, who works as an assistant manager at a Delhi-based automobile company, started feeding dogs in different localities of the city twice a day without a miss. He started by giving food to four street dogs in his locality but is now feeding around 700 canines on a daily basis.
"I have been feeding street dogs for four years. Following the announcement of lockdown, my office was also closed so I started doing this on a large scale. Street dogs and other stray animals are dependent on leftover food from offices, restaurants, and malls but they were closed due to lockdown," he said.
The self-confessed dog lover said he started feeding four dogs in the beginning but soon understood the extent of their plight and expanded his activity and now feeds around 700 dogs and 45 puppies.
"During the lockdown, I used to feed them twice a day. But now since my office has resumed recently I have started feeding them at night. I have hired a rickshaw-puller who feeds the strays in the day," Vidit Sharma said.
The 28-year-old explained, "I cook 100-kilogram rice daily in my kitchen. I mix soybean and around 200 eggs in rice. Then we feed them. We also serve them 'daliya' and rotis with milk. We change the food every day." Sharma said that the strays now regularly wait for him for their daily meal.
Radium collars
Concerned with accidents at night, Sharma also started an initiative to procure collars with radium for these dogs. He said that accident cases can be reduced as radium collars would help drivers to identify dogs even in the dark.
"During the lockdown, traffic was minimum. After 'Unlock 1' began, accident cases increased. Then, I came up with the idea of radium collars. It will help people to identify these dogs in the dark. I have purchased 60 radium collars. One collar costs Rs 360. I am planning to purchase 1,000 collars," he said.
Sharma regularly posts photos and videos of his canine friends on social media platforms. Some individuals have approached him with promises of help but he is still the major investor in the initiative he started. He said that he has invested the major portion of his savings in helping the canines.
"When I posted this on social media, some people helped us. Some helped with money, a shopkeeper provides me with rice at a price lower than the retailing price. A person provides me milk at the rate which is cheaper than the market rate," he said.
Sharma also said that the rickshaw puller drops off the meals at various places in Noida. He also gets help from one of his close friends.
(With ANI inputs) (ANI Photo)
Updated 19:17 IST, June 15th 2020