Blanca: A very special Great Dane puppy
Transcription
Blanca: A very special Great Dane puppy
A special place where disabled animals enjoy life on a Montana ranch. Winter 2007/2008 Newsletter 3 pg Blanca: A very special Great Dane puppy 2 pg Happy endings 3 pg Recent arrivals 4 pg It's all in the tail Steve and Alayne with blind Shasta. He was the first of thirteen blind Appaloosas to come to the ranch. A remarkable year for the animals – thanks to you! When our wonderful supporters send in donations, they often include a gracious note thanking us for what we’re doing here with these disabled animals. But as we say over and over again, this place simply would not be possible without those gifts for the animals. It’s you who deserve all the thanks – and the credit – for helping to make the sanctuary a reality. Because of your support, animals from far and wide can come to the ranch. For instance, in 2007 we had 15 disabled animals arrive here to start a new life. They came from 10 states – Alabama, California, Idaho, Iowa, Montana, Nevada, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Washington – and Mexico. These animals have the full range of disabilities we care for at the ranch, including blind, blind-and-deaf, three-legged, and neurologically impaired. For each of them, 2007 was indeed a remarkable year, because they all got another chance at a life filled with love and happiness. They came here because there was no other place for them to go. Today, along with the rest of the 80 disabled animals at the ranch, they are now thriving in this special place. It’s all because of you. Thank you for your kindness and compassion! Alayne Marker and Steve Smith, Co-founders Make a gift for the animals There are many ways you can help the animals: • Make a cash donation. You can mail a check, make a secure online donation at our Web site, or call us to process a credit card donation over the phone. • Donate stock (we can work with your broker on the details). • Make a bequest to the sanctuary in your will. See our planned giving page for more information at www.rollingdogranch.org/support/planned_giving.html. • Ask us to send you extra newsletters for your family and friends, and for your vet clinic, too. The sanctuary is a 501(c)(3) non-profit charitable organization and runs 100% on donations. Contributions are taxdeductible. We appreciate your help! 2 page • Winter 2007/2008 • Rolling Dog Ranch Animal Sanctuary Another happy ending! Three-legged Cody, a Lab who started out his journey to the ranch from Florida last year, just found a new home with Elena C. from Missoula, Montana. Elena already had a three-legged dog, and decided to add a second one to the family when she fell in love with Cody. He was one of six disabled animals we adopted out this year. Thanks to these special people for being such angels! Ranch gift store now online We just opened our own “gift store” online. It’s small, but it’s a start! You can purchase sanctuary hats, travel mugs, coffee mugs, totebags, and greeting cards. Find the link to the store at www.rollingdogranch.org. Blindness in Appaloosas We just launched a new Web site at BlindAppaloosas.org devoted to blindness in the Appaloosa horse breed. Compared to other breeds, Appaloosas are much more likely to get uveitis, the leading cause of blindness in horses, and are more likely to go blind as a result. This is why, of 25 blind horses at the sanctuary, 13 are Appaloosas. So we decided to do what we could to focus attention on this very real problem in the breed. If you know someone with an Appaloosa, or anyone with horses who would be interested in this topic, please tell them about the site. Volume 6, Issue 4. Written by Steve Smith. Graphic design donated by Terrel Armstrong. Photos by Steve Smith, Alayne Marker and Elena Contreras. All rights reserved to the Rolling Dog Ranch Animal Sanctuary. Blanca: A very special Great Dane puppy Blind and deaf Blanca was born on a ranch in Mexico ... and now happily lives on a ranch in Montana! An American citizen living in Mexico, Rosanna M., had a litter of 18 puppies born to her Great Dane this past April. Seven were stillborn or died soon thereafter. Of the remaining puppies, there was a very special one – a little girl who was born deaf and with microphthalmia, leaving her with tiny eyeballs. Her left eye is so small it isn’t even noticeable. Her right eye is a beautiful bright blue, but so shrunken in size it’s not really functional. We think she can see shapes and the difference between light and dark, but that’s about all. Rosanna found she couldn’t care for a puppy with these disabilities, and asked a Great Dane rescue group for assistance. They told her to contact us. Rosanna flew Blanca from Guadalajara to Seattle, and then our volunteers drove the 4-month old puppy to us in Montana. Two days before Blanca arrived, our blind Great Dane puppy named Claude died from his neurological condition. It seemed a fitting tribute to Claude that another disabled Dane puppy would take his place. Blanca was already a big and bouncy girl when she arrived, with ears to match. Full of life, she loves to wrestle with the other young dogs. She quickly learned to use her size to her advantage, and with a quick thrust of her big paws, she can knock just about anyone over. When we took these photos of Blanca, she was seven months old – and already the biggest dog on the ranch. One afternoon, not long after she arrived, we heard Blanca scratching at the front door to go out. We opened the door, she trotted outside, and off she went to pee. This blind and deaf puppy had housetrained herself. Blanca has become a true housedog, and sees her rightful place as occupying the recliner in our living room. If that chair – her favorite spot – isn’t available, then she’ll drape herself across one of the many dog cots or beds. For some reason Blanca prefers the ones that are too small for her lanky frame, resulting in awkward-looking sleeping positions ... usually with her head hanging off the end! Recent arrivals Kasha the three-legged puppy The email subject line read, “Shepherd pup missing rear limb.” A volunteer for the animal control shelter in Spokane, Washington, was asking if we could take a puppy named Kasha. The dog was missing her rear left foot, leaving her leg dangling. The volunteer said, “Her chance of adoption here is slim.” We had the shelter take the puppy to our veterinary surgeons in Spokane, who found someone had chopped the dog’s foot off. The wound had healed, but the surgeons said the rest of the leg needed to be amputated. Despite her traumatic past, Kasha loves people and is a happy girl with a big smile and a playful attitude. And attitude she’s got – she wants to be leader of the pack! Tibby and Fibby the kittens with deformed legs The Panhandle Animal Shelter in Sandpoint, Idaho, called us about two kittens with deformed legs. They were part of a litter turned into the shelter, but they were the only kittens affected. They seemed to be missing bones in their rear legs. Our vets X-rayed the two babies and found something truly odd – the kittens have no fibulas at all, and their tibias (the shin bone) are twisted like a small pretzel. What’s more, the tibias don’t connect to the femurs, or thigh bones, so their lower legs kind of flop. As kittens, however, they’re not flops at all ... but the real thing! They love to explore, play with toys, and purr if we walk into the room. These two adorable characters have no idea they’re not “normal”! Darby the blind mare Darby was in a Washington state feedlot destined for slaughter when a horse rescue group spotted her. They asked if we could take her. Darby’s eyes bulged from glaucoma, she was thin, and her skin was covered in scars from getting beaten up by other horses. It took months to get weight on her, and eventually our vets had to remove her eyes because of chronic pain, but she’s now very much on the mend. She’s one of the biggest horses at the ranch, but she’s found her soulmate in one of our smallest horses, our blind filly named Brynn. She towers over Brynn and we call them the “odd couple,” but they have become inseparable friends. Winter 2007/2008 • Rolling Dog Ranch Animal Sanctuary • page 3 NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION U.S. POSTAGE PAID PERMIT NO. 15 OVANDO, MT 59854 400 Rolling Dog Ranch Lane, Ovando, Montana 59854 406-793-6000 • www.rollingdogranch.org Return Service Requested Visit our Web sites at RollingDogRanch.org and BlindHorses.org I’m dead. Except for my tail. You might think our miniature Dachshund Bailey is trying to learn how to fly by using his ears as wings. About the sanctuary The Rolling Dog Ranch Animal Sanctuary is home to many types of disabled animals. Our residents include blind dogs, blind horses, deaf dogs, blind cats, and animals with other physical and medical disabilities like muscular dystrophy. Although these animals may have disabilities, they do not consider themselves handicapped. They just want to get on with life and enjoy themselves. Thanks to the support of the sanctuary's friends, that's what they get to do here. Yet these are the animals who are the least likely to be adopted and the most likely to be euthanized in traditional shelters. That’s why we focus on the disabled. Steve Smith and Alayne Marker founded the sanctuary in 2000 as a 501(c)(3) non-profit charitable organization known as a private operating foundation. Donations are taxdeductible to the fullest extent allowed by law. The ranch covers 160 acres of grassland in the Blackfoot River valley of western Montana. The sanctuary cares for about 80 animals, and is supported 100% by donations. Thank you for your kindness! 4 page • Winter 2007/2008 • Rolling Dog Ranch Animal Sanctuary When it's time to put everyone out for the night's last potty stop, our blind Dachshund Callie is the only dog who pretends not to know what the routine is. Not only that, she pretends she can't hear us. (We call this phenomenon "transitional blind-and-deaf syndrome.") She rolls over and plays dead. When we approach her, calling her name, at first she lies absolutely motionless. Then, almost imperceptibly, her little tail starts moving. It's like an involuntary action triggered by the unbearable tension of the situation ... human demanding action, Dachshund refusing to budge. A tense stand-off. ("If I play dead long enough, eventually this annoying person will just go away and leave me alone.") But the tail gives her away, and soon it moves in rhythm with the urgency of our voice. The more we call her name, the faster her tail moves ... but nothing else does. We finally captured this on video and posted the clip on YouTube, where it’s been viewed more than 60,000 times. Go to www.youtube.com/rollingdogranch to see this video and more! Visits to the ranch The sanctuary is open for visits from June through September on the 1st and 3rd weekends of the month. All visits are by appointment only. Please call in advance to schedule a visit and get directions. The sanctuary is closed for visits from October through May and also on major holidays.