Sunday, June 26, 2011

Easy Life

It's a lazy Sunday on the Dog Farm. All the critters are napping - Jasmine under the dining room table, Maggie on the stairway landing, Brandy at Husband Bob's feet in the family room, Pennie next to me in the kitchen and Annie is in her comfortable little cubby hole. The dogs are quiet and resting, but I'll bet if I stand up from the table they will get up too and be ready to go! Go anywhere - the backyard, to the dog park, for a ride.
Maggie had an encounter with a stick at the dog park Thursday. The stick won and Maggie ended up at the vet with an ulcerated eye. She's on pain killers and antibiotic eye drops. Maggie's eye looks much better now and the pain seems to have gone away. She goes in for a recheck on Monday to make sure everything is healing correctly.
Fireworks go on sale tomorrow for July 4th. The coming week will be especially long for Jasmine and Annie. We'll turn on radios and fans to muffle the noise but it will probably be a long week on the Farm.
I am so happy to tell you that Momma Dog and the puppies are doing well. Momma's new name is Faith - Faith because we had to keep the faith as we worked on her behalf. The fear of the justice system returning Faith to the evil man was resolved Thursday. That hurdle is jumped but we haven't forgotten the fight. We are investigating how people can act in an animal's best interest. How domestic animals can be represented. It makes absolutely no sense that a cat or dog would have to be returned to the person who was, literally, starving them to death.
Several North Platte friends participated in rescue transports last week. For those who don't know about transports, it's relaying dogs and cats from Point A to Point B. The task is to move a cat or dog from where they are to where their new home awaits them. Volunteers drive the animals, say 100 miles, to meet up with the next volunteer who then drives to the next and the next and the next. Transports are a wonderful way to help animals who otherwise wouldn't find their forever home. I haven't driven as many transports as some but those I've done have been very rewarding to know I did a little bit to help an animal get to its forever home.
Have a good week ahead.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Momma Dog

Last week, the police seized a momma and her five puppies from an evil man in North Platte. Momma is the most emaciated, starved dog I've ever seen, so bad that even though I can't describe her condition well I'm not posting the pictures of her. I think momma was days from dying. Today, Friend Levaun and I visited the foster home where momma and her family are. Everyone is doing well. The home has children who spend time with the dogs and the dogs have a large kennel and a nice warm bed. Momma has a very long way to heal but she's content in her new surroundings. When we were there, Momma loved being petted - nudging closer when I tried to stop. The puppies are recovering from their own abuse including infected tails from the evil man cutting them off. The puppies are a beautiful brindle stripe. I'll post pictures as the puppies get old enough to adopt.
The situation with momma dog and the puppies has stirred my friends and I to a state of motion. We have been told that, even though the evil man was charged with animal abuse, he is going to fight to get the dogs back. Those of us who have seen the dogs aren't going to let that happen. We are developing a plan and we will find a way to make things right. Please, pray for momma and the puppies and the justice system.
Things at the Dog Farm are going well. This morning, out of the blue, Annie had a happy attack. She burst through the doggie door, ran through the house, up the stairs, down into the family room and to the kitchen where she plopped down. I swear, she had an ear to ear smile on her face. It was a good day to be a dog.
Jasmine is doing well. She went to the vet for a check-up last week and everything is still the same. Day by day, she's far outlasted her predicted life expectancy. :)

Thursday, June 9, 2011

We're Back!

After not blogging for two months I'm back! There have been milestones with Annie, funny moments with the dogs and busy times with the family and Paws-itive Partners the past couple months.
You've heard of beauty benefits of mud baths and how women indulge in the spas. Well, Jasmine's found hers - she loves mud puddles at the dog park. On her back, rolling, rolling, rolling until the mud is rubbed in and caked into her fur. Ahh, cool, lovely!
Annie allowed Husband Bob to pet on her for a few minutes awhile back. Annie looked tense and wouldn't have eye contact with Bob but she stayed and seemed to enjoy the petting and scratching her back. Annie is acting more and more comfortable at the Dog Farm. She's out from her hiding spots about 50% of the time now.
Maggie's been limping yesterday and today. She was fine when we went to work but when we got home she was favoring her front foot. Don't know if she got tangled in the fence trying to get at the garden, misstepped going down the stair or what. The vet said as long as it's improving she's probably fine.
Corgi Pennie and Ms. Brandy are bed hogs! For several months, Brandy's snuck into our bed in the middle of the night. More recently, Bob introduced Pennie to the comforts of our bed, too. Now, every evening there's a race to see who gets to the bedroom first. Brandy still thinks she's top dog and gets most of the room on my side of the bed. It's pretty funny how two dogs can stretch out so far.
Paws-itve Partners' 5th annual Woofstock was a howling success. We had perfect weather, great events and lots of dogs and people at Memorial Park. Dogs strutted in best dressed, most look alike, best trick, biggest wag contests. We had Yappy Hour with cinnamon rolls/coffee and Bow Wow BBQ with hot dogs/hamburgers. The day was a complete success as people and dogs walked around enjoying the day together.
North Platte's Platte River is flooding. Cody Park is sandbagged, East Highway 30 is closed and some neighborhoods have been warned they might have to evacuate. All this is a good reminder we need to plan for emergencies and what to do for our pets. Our government and crisis centers learned from Hurricane Katrina's tragedy that people don't/won't leave their pets behind. It's a good idea for each of us to plan before we need it and know what we will do to help our four-leggeds.
I'm very happy to report that Jasmine is doing fine living with her cancer. She eats well, runs as fast as anyone at the dog park, hasn't lost interest in any of her activities and is still getting good checkups from the vet. You couldn't tell anything is wrong if you didn't see the tumor on her face. Jas acts great, is very affectionate, as beautiful as ever and such a delight to have in the pack. :)