
Summerville Journal Scene ®
We have a new mouth to feed at our house.
We didn’t plan it that way. In fact the Hubster and I’d had a conversation a few days earlier that we were content with our very placid lives – including the two wieners who own us and the two grown men-children who live in other states.
Easy. That’s what our at-home lives were. Easy.
Then I came home from work one day to find a message on my answering machine from an animal rescue. I heard the tale of a woman who called about her neighbors, or more aptly put, her former neighbors. It seems these folks had abandoned their home more than a month earlier and she, nor the neighbors on the other side of the newly departeds’ former home, realized they had gone.
And it would not have mattered except that although they had gone, their animals had not. Four dogs and a cat were still residing in the back yard. She said that all were skin and bones. They were starving to death. The neighbor had called for help in rescuing the poor animals before something unthinkable happened to them.
The Hubster arrived home and I told him what was going on. We went to the rescue and saw the pitiful dogs and the cat. The emaciated cat walked carefully and looked like she’d fall over if a light wind hit her. According to the rescuer, the cat and dogs looked way better than they did when she first saw them because she had been feeding them for close to a week. It was enough to make us cry.
We agreed to take the one that would most likely fit in with our crew at home. They assured us that the other dog would be fostered until a home could be found. We went to the car and got the carrier and returned to pick up one, small, trembling dog and took her home.
Our two wieners greeted their new sister with some skepticism, and the new girl did the same. She was very quiet. We tried to feed her, but she wasn’t interested.
That night I made a bed for her on the floor next to the head of our bed. The other two were already asleep on their cushion on the floor at the foot.
I placed our guest on her cushion. She immediately jumped up on our bed. I gently placed her back on her bed. A few seconds later she jumped back up. I repeated the procedure. Each time it took her longer to jump back to the bed. By the fifth time when I placed her back on her bed, she stayed there. All night. :She’s either a smart dog or exhausted dog,” I told the Hubster the next morning. “Probably both,” re replied.
The next day she ate. She was hungry, very hungry. But we fed her a moderate amount. Not too much, too soon.
By day three she’d assimilated into our household. By day five she’d had her first visit to the vet.
“She probably wouldn’t have lasted much longer,” the vet said. “I suspect she was on her way out -- and she has heartworms.” We were sitting on a bench in his office with our new baby. The doctor’s assistant smiled, “She looks so happy sitting there between the two of you.” The vet said we needed to strengthen her for a while before he started the heartworm treatments.
A woman from the animal rescue group said this is not an unusual scenario these days as more and more people lose their homes due to job loss and illness. The veterinarian and his staff said they had seen many, many animals that had been abandoned. People lose their homes – and leave their pets.
But, I have to ask, “Is leaving animals alone, outside in the heat, to starve to death, the right way to handle that situation? Does that really seem like the right thing to do? Really?”
Let’s think it through, folks. Surrendering formerly much-loved pets to the SPCA or an animal rescue group is a better decision than leaving creatures to starve to death.
If you need help, contact:
• Frances R. Willis SPCA
136 Four Paws Ln, Summerville, SC (843) 871-3820; e-mail: manager@SummervilleSPCA.com
• Pet Helpers
1430 Folly Rd, Charleston, SC 843-795-1110; email: http://www.pethelpers.org/
• Berkeley County P.A.W.S.
P.O. Box 903, Goose Creek, SC (843) 688-4414 (Moncks Corner); berkeleycopaws@yahoo.com
• Doc Williams SPCA
502 Cypress Garden Road.
Moncks Corner, SC 29461
Phone: 843-761-0683
www.dwspca.com
• Charleston Animal Society a JASPCA Center
2455 Remount Road, N. Charleston, S.C. 29406
(843) 747-4849
info@charlestonanimalsociety.org
• Low Country Golden Retriever Rescue Resource
P.O. Box 31256, Charleston, SC 29417
(843) 571-7177
info@lcgrr.org
http://www.lcgrr.org
Journalscene.com ® is pleased to offer readers the enhanced ability to comment on stories. We expect our readers to engage in lively, yet civil discourse. Journalscene.com ® does not edit user submitted statements and we cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted in the comments area. Responsibility for the statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not Journalscene.com ®. If you find a comment that is objectionable, please click "report abuse" and we will review it for possible removal. Please be reminded, however, that in accordance with our Terms of Use and federal law, we are under no obligation to remove any third party comments posted on our website.
Users can now build user-to-user connections, follow friends' recent posts, add an avatar that fits their personality, and more. If you have posted here before you'll need to sign up again, or if you've never posted before, start now by reading our terms and conditions, and then signing up below!
- Most Viewed
- Most Commented
- Finding Mudville: Everything’s amazing
- McKissick given Shula award
- Local hunters’ story wins film award
- Researchers decode cancer mysteries with local funding
- Parkway planning revived
- Benton guilty, receives life sentence
- Teen mom charged with child neglect
- Smith Says: Purse-preparedness
- Benton trial under way
- Fanfare for the Common Man: It’s the shoes
- Bryngelson seeks House 97 seat (0)
- Lady Green Wave picks up big non-region win (0)
- Wrestling takes off at Ridge Christian Academy (0)
- Swamp Fox infielder signs with USC Sumter (0)
- Up to the Challenge (0)
- Choice gymnasts place in Irmo (0)
- Briefs (0)
- Patriots slip by Beaufort; Warriors best Green Wave (0)
- Lady Swamp Foxes take a shot at Colleton (0)
- Swamp Foxes hold off Cougar rally (0)
- Santee Cooper announces 2012 refunding bond sale
- Santee Cooper announces organizational changes in operation and finance departments
- Santee Cooper employees pitch in on Day of Caring
- Aerial herbicide treatment on lakes under way
- Santee Cooper Board Authorizes Rate Study
- Santee Cooper announces refunding bond sale
- Santee Cooper, Florida Municipal Power Agency enter into letter of intent for share of planned V.C. Summer Station units
- Santee Cooper, Duke Energy Carolinas enter into letter of intent for share of planned V.C. Summer Station units 2 and 3


