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Loving my Oldies

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Posts posted by Loving my Oldies

  1. I first saw the stupidity of more and more laws being enacted in 1999 when I became a volunteer at Burwood Animal Shelter.  Up until that time, I had no knowledge at all of the terrible underground of dog farming and abuse.  This was around the time when the Companion Animals Act was being put into legislation and being pretty wet around the ears, I thought this was going to put an end to lost dogs.  How naive can one be?
     

    In my naivety, I put together what I called my Seven Point Plan and one of those points was, @tdierikx, enforce the legislation that already exists.  
     

    After a few years, I realised that people actually don’t want to do anything.  Little frogs, big frogs, all desperately protecting their own little pond or puddle of water.  
     

    The politicians at all levels are useless.  They talk, make big announcements and most of the time nothing happens.  As Greta Thunberg says, we don’t need any more, “Blah, blah, blah.”  So succinctly put, Greta.  
     

    I have said on many occasions, if DOCS can’t protect little children, even those known to be in danger, what chance do our animals have.  

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  2. 12 minutes ago, ~Anne~ said:

    Aww, I would have loved to seen her doing zoomies. :laugh:

     

    Looking forward to reading her story as she heads towards her new home. Please keep the updates coming. I miss rescuing and through threads like this, I can enjoy it again in a small way.

    I miss them too and I miss posting about the little dogs who come and go.  Sadly, the stories are all gone because Troy doesn’t archive, just deletes, which is understandable.  
     

    Did you see the story about Megs?  It was around about April last year and before you made a comeback :laugh:  :laugh:.  I’ll find the link.  
     

    I will definitely try to get a video of her doing zoomies.  It was so unexpected and had put my iPad down.  

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  3. 4 hours ago, persephone said:

    She is just beautiful  :love:  I hope you both slept well! :)

    We did.  It was lovely having a little dog to cuddle on the bed.  Shala doesn’t like being on the bed and The Dirt Girls can’t get up and down on their own.  
     

     

    56 minutes ago, ~Anne~ said:

    Interesting cross. She’s looks very sweet. 

    Yes.  Can’t see any Poodly curls, though. She is 4.8kgs, but I think she could put on a couple of hundred grams.  
     

    OMG :rofl:  :rofl:, I am sitting in my garden and she has just started doing wild zoomies.  So wonderful to see.  

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  4. New little girl arrived yesterday, a surrender by a brave but broken hearted couple who realised they could not give her the life she needs and deserved.  There were copious tears.  
     

    Little Winnie is a tiny little Mini Dachshund x Toy Poodle (turns 3 soon) with the glossiest black coat I have ever seen. Very timid with severe separation anxiety, she is a sweet little dog who clambered up onto my bed last night and slept in the crook of my arm.  Tsk tsk, I am sooooo bad.  

     

    Here she is enjoying the front garden.  Mower man did not turn up on Friday and my mower Is kaput.  
     

    3648A0EC-7A78-43F2-93FA-52805FD06CBC

     

     

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  5. 15 hours ago, mita said:

    I hope you get to see Ralphie, the bobby dazzler, in a year, two years & three years ahead.

    I’m pretty sure I will, @mita.  In fact, I saw him  yesterday when I met him and his dads at our vets as he still had one small procedure (removal of an Adenoma) and already the huge patch of damaged skin and hair loss on his back is decreasing.  I was absolutely thrilled at his progress.  His dads are hilarious.  We had coffee after we had left Ralphie and I asked them whether there had been any other topic of conversation in their house in the last week.  They looked at each other and said, “No.”
     

     

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  6. @mita, Bobby Dazzler came from Denise (DAP) who always asks her foster to name the dogs.  I was playing around with a few names because I could see how great he would look when his coat came back.  He has such a glorious white “bib”, so I finally came up with Dazzy and Denise said that we would advertise him as Bobby Dazzler.  It didn’t come to that because one of DAP’s foster carers knew of two men who’d recently lost their beloved dog.  She told them about Dazzy and that was that :heart:  :heart:

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  7. It can certainly be just lucky, @Rebanne or it can be that certain breeders, against all odds, continue to do the right thing and their interest is purely breed enhancement.  unfortunately, just about everything is market driven :(

     

    My girls, Bunches and Beatrice, were from a puppy mill.  Their personalities are sheer delight.  It never crossed my mind that I would be the clucky, lucky, giggling mum to two Pekingese :heart:  :heart:  :heart: 
     

     

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  8. I have just adopted two Pekingese sisters (foster failure :rofl: :rofl: :heart::heart:) and before their adoption they each had already had two surgeries: entropion and skin folds reduction to stop hairs rubbing their eyes.  
     

    What is the solution for many horrors perpetrated against dogs and other animals when Crufts has a BIS German Shepherd whose back elbows are almost on the ground and who can hardly walk properly and another year a Pekingese who could hardly breathe?  

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  9. @tdierikx, for many years, my brother lived in a small house next to his hospital and was on call 24/7 for all that time.  Even when the growing family moved to a larger house 10 minutes away, he continued this practice.  I am glad your experiences were so positive.  
     

    @Luvapoo, my brother regularly got the “you are supposed to love animals” reason for querying accounts and expecting a free service.  Bad debts were par for the course :mad  :mad .  
     

    Another problem was clients who knew better and those who refused to follow rules for helping their animals heal.  One such memory. I remember being at his hospital and wandering around looking at the animals.  One of the patients was a beautiful Dalmatian whose owner had to be supervised and handbag taken away before she visited because she could not be trusted not to feed the dog and consequently making him violently ill.  She was feeding him handfuls of peanuts.  
     

    The stories, both heart warming and horrific, are endless.  

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