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Suzette’s Surgery Surprise

Little Suzette

Suzette was found as a stray and into Baldwin Park shelter with her best friend. Her best friend was adopted….but Suzette was left behind because she had mammary tumors.

Her rescuer could not leave her there to die and reached out to her friends; the money to have her tumors biopsied and removed. The doctor was performing her surgery on May 25 when he noticed a scar on her abdomen. He thought she may have been spayed already but felt a hard spot under the scar and made an incision to explore further.

He was shocked to find a full sized, 5 inch pencil from eraser to lead, buried in her abdomen. He removed the pencil, finished her surgery.  He explained that the only way this pencil could have entered her body was through a purposeful incision.

He explained that the pencil was not in her intestines, but rather, embedded under her skin and therefore could not have entered the body through either orifice.

The pencil found in her abdomen

The doctor was outraged and shaken and stated this is the worst case of animal abuse he has ever seen.

Today Suzette is recovering nicely from both surgeries and is in good spirits and in a foster home where she is receiving lots of love.

However, because her medical care turned out to more complicated than originally planned, donations are needed.

If you would like to make a contribution for Suzette’s medical care, donations can be made directly to the vet – Southern California Animal Hospital (626-330-4558) in the name of “Suzette” – or to her Chipin at http://baldwinparksuzette.chipin.com/suzette-from-baldwin-park.

Tiny Willow – A Bundle of Hope & Life

While United Hope for Animals finds rescue placements and adoptive homes for over one hundred healthy, adoptable, homeless dogs each month through our Shelter Support Program, we continue to seek options for the broken and neglected.

At our last shelter “Glamour Shot” day, we discovered a tiny Maltese mix, clearly unloved and forgotten by her former owners, in the back of the shelter clinic.

This is the condition Willow was in when her prior owners left her at the shelter.

Weighing just two pounds, her tiny body was riddled with fleas and her eyes were sealed shut from an infection that had gone untreated for a long time. Since her emaciated body and eye infection eliminated her opportunity for adoption, rescue was the only way this little girl, whom we named Willow, stood a chance at knowing comfort and love.

The day we arrived was the day she was scheduled for euthanasia, so we made the decision to take her to our vet hospital (the Southern California Animal Hospital in La Puente), where Dr Anil Kumar gave her the medical attention she had been deprived of all her life.

This is little Willow being carried from the shelter to the vet hospital.

United Hope for Animals is grateful to the donors who made this rescue possible. We were able to act on Willow’s behalf when we first met her because of recent donations to our Angel Fund, which is dedicated to providing medical care for shelter animals who need a little extra help finding their way to their new homes.

Willow is now comfortable and healing in foster care. She is very responsive to humans and, as her Life4Paws foster mom, Debbie, reports, “is happy to lick your nose to let you know she’s okay… I don’t think this little bundle has ever been held, but she’s getting used to it and starting to trust.”

As a result of her long-term eye infections, she is completely blind in one eye and has only limited vision in the other. She loves the other dogs, big and small, in her foster home, and takes comfort in knowing they are there.

Willow needs to gain back at least one-third of her body weight since the neglect she has suffered has left her so thin. Right now, she is quite frail, but she is eating, drinking and settling in beautifully.

It took many hours to clean the years of neglect out of her eyes. Here she is sitting in the car on her way to her foster home after being treated at the hospital.

With time, medical care, proper nutrition and lots of love, she will be stronger, furrier and very happy. She is already bringing much joy to Debbie, who will continue to send us updates as we work to find Willow a permanent home.

Although little Willow is now safe and without question loved, further tests will determine if she needs additional medical treatment. United Hope is in need of funding so that more special dogs like Willow can be rescued, treated, and live out the rest of their lives knowing love, comfort and human kindness.

To donate to our Angel Rescue Fund, please click on the Chipin in the top of the left column on this page.

Update: It is with a heavy heart that we have to report that sweet little Willow passed away. This adorable senior had a hard life, but we are comforted to know that her last eight months were probably her best, filled with love and tender care. Willow’s foster mom, Debbie, and her son loved and adored Willow. In the time she was with them she gained weight, her eyes were kept clean and clear, and she enjoyed the company of humans and other dogs. She passed away peacefully overnight in her bed. We wish they could all have this at the end. With your donations, more animals in dire need can be rescued and given the gift of love in their final months and years.

Willow in her loving foster home.

 

Tica: Lost and Found Again

Story by Kerry Oldridge

As anyone who as been doing animal rescue for any length of time can tell you, everywhere you look an animal is in need of rescue. Certain areas, just south of the Mexican border, have so many homeless dogs, that people stop paying attention. When there are so many, only the most desperate stand out, and, fortunately for one little Chihuahua, someone finally paid attention to her suffering.

A woman living in an apartment building in Ensenada called 4 PAWS, an area animal rescue, to report an abandoned dog. She told 4 Paws that the people who had owned the dog (and who used to live in the building) moved away and left this dog behind, and the dog had been outside wandering around the area fending for herself for a very long time.

Little Tica had barely survived this long by eating any bit of food scrap that fell from trashcans around the apartment building, or what she found on the street. However, the woman caller told 4 PAWS that she did not think the little dog would last much longer. 4 Paws immediately drove to the address, found the dog outside the building, wrapped her in a blanket, and took her to a foster home for treatment.

Tica had a broken leg, a very painful eye infection, and mange so extensive that in some areas her skin was gone and her flesh exposed. Although she was only 2 years old when she was rescued, it was clear that she had already had many puppies, and, had recently given birth. Although the rescue volunteers searched for the puppies, sadly they were never found. It took months of treatment and care before little Tica would even lift her head.

She was not only near death due to the neglect and injures, but she was depressed and withdrawn. Tica eventually responded to her care, was ready to be spayed, and was taken to the spay and neuter clinic preformed by 4 PAWS, sponsored by UHA and a few other individual donors. She was then taken to Julie Meager in San Diego to complete her fostering, and post her for adoption.

Julie Meagher who has, over the years, fostered many rescued pups for both UHA and AAUS, decided that little Tica had in fact found her forever home. After many months of caring for her, Julie and her family decided that they wanted to adopt Tica. Julie said, “we want to make it up to her, to erase all the suffering she had to endure by giving her love and comfort each and every day.

“She may look like just another ordinary, little brown Chihuahua, but she is special,” Meagher said. “Tica is so very grateful; she is one of the most loving dogs we have met. All she want is to give and receive love, she fills our home with joy, and we feel lucky to have her.”

Although Tica’s condition was extreme, in Mexico, this is the typical condition of the homeless dogs, and sadly there are many thousands of dogs like her struggling to survive.

Every month, United Hope for Animals, (UHA), teams up with Animal Advocates of the United States, (AAUS), 4 Paws, and other individual sponsors, to hold a spay and neuter clinic in Tijuana, Ensenada and other areas in Baja, California. As well as offering this much needed service to pets owners that would otherwise not be able to afford it, the long standing relationship between UHA, AAUS and 4 PAWS also enables us to help owners find lost or stolen dogs, rescue abandon dogs, and ensure that they are spayed, neutered, and find safe, loving, permanent homes.

These clinics provide this very important service to the public, who would not otherwise be able to afford it, and as well, to local rescue groups working to help the abandon street dogs. Please help us get the abandon dogs and cats off the street, and into loving homes, and help us ensure that each pet is safely spayed and neutered. Together, with your help, we can end this tragic cycle of suffering.

Tica was one of the many fortunate recipients of the critical link between UHA, AAUS and 4 PAWS.