The word abuse is really an understatement. The dogs are found hanged by their necks from trees, or with their throats slashed, burned alive or thrown down deep wells. And, most shockingly, these are not isolated incidents of cruelty. Every year as the hare coursing season comes to an end in February, thousands of the dogs, galgos in Castilian, are either abandoned or killed by their owners in rural Spain.
Some of the luckier ones end up being treated by Anna and her husband Albert Sordé de Uralde at their veterinary surgery in Esplugues de Llobregat, just outside Barcelona. Anna, 41, originally from Manchester in the UK, and her Catalan husband set up the charity SOS Galgos in 2000 to help rescue the animals and place them with adoptive families. They live with their two greyhounds, William Shakespeare and Lisa, in the flat above the Tres Vet surgery, finding new homes around the world for some 350 dogs each year. The galgos, which are slightly smaller than English greyhounds and marginally slower, are used in hare coursing around Spain, especially in the autonomous regions of Andalusia, Castilla-La Mancha, Castilla y León, Madrid and Extremadura. Hare coursing was banned in the UK in 2005, at the same time as fox hunting, but is widely practised in Spain, where there are 634 clubs with 14,000 members each owning between five and 20 dogs, according to the Federación Española de Galgos, which says the blood sport is no longer practised in Catalunya.
Animal rights campaigners say there are up to three million greyhounds used in hare coursing around the world. Two galgos compete against each other pursuing a hare across miles of open countryside until it is either caught or escapes to a safe refuge. The dogs, followed by hunters in cars or on horseback, reach speeds of up to 40 miles per hour and the animal that catches the hare is considered the winner. The season runs from October to the beginning of February, when Anna’s charity becomes snowed under with work as they try to rescue as many abandoned dogs as possible.
Anna is a former English teacher who now works full-time running the charity as well as giving talks in local schools. She was born in the UK, brought up in Canada and then lived in France and Switzerland before settling in Catalunya, where she met her husband while he was treating her pet dog.




Latest Comments
Hare Coursing
Posted by John Fitzgerald August 01, 2011 12:06:03
Thank you
Posted by Lisi February 13, 2011 22:57:59
Bendito, Una and Iggy
Posted by Mark Grzebien February 08, 2011 07:58:18
and I thought racing was cruel...
Posted by Sherri S. February 07, 2011 10:04:22