. . .
3 years ago
News
In 2020, my father brought home a small puppy (about 3-7 days from birth. Even the umbilical cord has not dried off)
The fact is that my father works at a water intake station near the forest. And while walking around the territory, he found a blue bag with three puppies next to the road. Two of them did not survive, only one girl of white color, similar to a white Swiss shepherd, remained alive. Not having the means to raise a puppy, we bought diapers, fed with a syringe (without a needle) milk on infant formula (of course, in the future we bought nipples), washed, bathed, wiped the ass of a blind puppy. 2 years have passed and the puppy has grown up, has become an adult healthy active cheerful dog. She have already given birth to puppies 2 times (which we distributed to new owners). My girl dog was called Umka.
I lost my beloved pet at the beginning of August this year. It was extremely hard to watch my pet suffer in death throes...I had to do something I didn't want to do. But it was the only way to ease her suffering. My mom called the vet and he gave the dog a soporific injection. I didn't even have time to say goodbye to her.
Judging by her behavior in July, the disease affected her nervous system, from which my girl lost her orientation in space, just walked, whined and pressed her face against the wall (as if she didn't see me, the walls, furniture, nothing around) stood there for a few minutes moaning. She didn't react to words, to touching her. At first (in June, early July) she walked, ran, played and everything was fine, but when the disease began to progress (by the end of July) after the first injections and a trip to the vet (August 2), my dog completely lay on his side and did not get up, unable even to take liquid food or water from a syringe. I had to do something I didn't want to do. It was difficult to call a veterinarian, and he gave a sedative injection.
It was especially hard to lose someone you raised literally from birth, fed from a nipple, starting from a diaper. When the dog lost the ability to go to the toilet on the street, I had to lay diapers (like 2 years ago, when she first appeared in my family). When the dog did not eat for almost a day, he had to feed her with a syringe with liquid warm food (as they fed milk 2 years ago). Where we started... that's the end of it...
Take care of your pets, vaccinate them on time and in case of any deviations in behavior, contact knowledgeable doctors😣💔
The fact is that my father works at a water intake station near the forest. And while walking around the territory, he found a blue bag with three puppies next to the road. Two of them did not survive, only one girl of white color, similar to a white Swiss shepherd, remained alive. Not having the means to raise a puppy, we bought diapers, fed with a syringe (without a needle) milk on infant formula (of course, in the future we bought nipples), washed, bathed, wiped the ass of a blind puppy. 2 years have passed and the puppy has grown up, has become an adult healthy active cheerful dog. She have already given birth to puppies 2 times (which we distributed to new owners). My girl dog was called Umka.
I lost my beloved pet at the beginning of August this year. It was extremely hard to watch my pet suffer in death throes...I had to do something I didn't want to do. But it was the only way to ease her suffering. My mom called the vet and he gave the dog a soporific injection. I didn't even have time to say goodbye to her.
Judging by her behavior in July, the disease affected her nervous system, from which my girl lost her orientation in space, just walked, whined and pressed her face against the wall (as if she didn't see me, the walls, furniture, nothing around) stood there for a few minutes moaning. She didn't react to words, to touching her. At first (in June, early July) she walked, ran, played and everything was fine, but when the disease began to progress (by the end of July) after the first injections and a trip to the vet (August 2), my dog completely lay on his side and did not get up, unable even to take liquid food or water from a syringe. I had to do something I didn't want to do. It was difficult to call a veterinarian, and he gave a sedative injection.
It was especially hard to lose someone you raised literally from birth, fed from a nipple, starting from a diaper. When the dog lost the ability to go to the toilet on the street, I had to lay diapers (like 2 years ago, when she first appeared in my family). When the dog did not eat for almost a day, he had to feed her with a syringe with liquid warm food (as they fed milk 2 years ago). Where we started... that's the end of it...
Take care of your pets, vaccinate them on time and in case of any deviations in behavior, contact knowledgeable doctors😣💔