Monday, October 24, 2011

Oops! I Did It Again.

On first entering our house

It is five years since I found Bonnie straying on the Dreen Road and nearly three years since I found Fred abandoned outside Kells. Neither of them were as pathetic as the wee border collie Ben and I found yesterday sitting in the midst of a deluge, in a ditch near Ladyhill. He was soaked to the skin, filthy, skinny and scared. Between us we managed to get him into the car. At first I drove past him but there was a walker a few hundred yards in front and I stopped with him. He said he'd seen the dog and had enquired at a nearby house. He said the people knew that the dog was there and were 'keeping an eye on it'. He wondered if it had been clipped by a car. I decided to go back. I approached the dog and it ran off frightened. It did not look injured and did not run far. It settled itself down on the sodden ditch. Eventually between us Ben and I managed to get it into the boot of my car. I drive an estate so the wee dog was not enclosed. This meant it could benefit from the heating system and it also meant we could appreciate its stench which was very bad. I left Ben home and hurried back to Cully.

The little dog has been here over 24 hours now and has warmed up, got dry and eaten several small meals. He is traumatised but is starting to come round. He picked a little enclosed corner to lie in and I have laid blankets down for him. Last night he slept under a rug with a hot water bottle. I have been in contact with the dog warden and she told me that the place I found him is notorious for dog-dumping and that they are nearly always collies. I have offered to keep him for a while.

My daughter and family were here today and she is worried that our house is too busy for a traumatised dog and that he needs somewhere quieter. She does have a point but I think he will get used to us. In fact I think he's starting to already. He does seem to be glad that there are other dogs around. I get the feeling that, so far in his life, his significant relationships have been with his own kind and that he is suspicious of people.

My plan, if the dog warden cannot reunite him with his owner, is to settle him down, get him checked by the vet, eventually get Hannah to clean him up (she loves grooming dogs) and, ultimately, find him a loving home.

Wish us luck!

Taken this afternoon, dry, fed, watered but still unsure

These pictures were emailed to the dog warden just in case someone reports him missing.

7 comments:

Brig said...

I love border collies, it's been a year since Maxwell, the wonder cowdog, died...
wish I was closer I'd take your boy in a heart beat.
Though it sounds as if he might have been meant for you...
you ol softy! You've a heart big enough for one more.

Nelly said...

Heart maybe - don't know about the purse! The feed bill is nearly as big as the grocery bill.

Anonymous said...

Whatever the future holds for that frightened little fellow, I know it will be bright because you, Nelly, will see him well-settled with kind people be it your garden or someone else's.
Can't believe it's been 5 years since Bonnie arrived!
anne

Nelly said...

The little dog is still very shy and withdrawn but very forward around food!

Brig said...

I tend to be forward around food, too...

Nelly said...

Yet another thing we have in common Brighid! Toilet training the new dog is taking a lot of my time this week but being a clever collie he is getting the message!

Susannah said...

Nelly,

You're the best! Most people would have considered the inconvenience and drove by. You probably considered the inconvenience but you stopped - lucky little guy. Hope you find a good home for him. He probably thinks he's in heaven now.