Riana
Well-Known Member
Two precious little girls ended up in the care of a horrible person after their previous owner couldn't take care of them any longer. This woman who took them seemed to really care for them, even bought them a huge cage, and took Lydia in for surgery to have a lump removed when one grew suddenly.
Over the next several months the girls lost weight, were never taken out of their cage or played with or socialized, and eventually they were given away to a wonderful lady named Raven.
The woman contacted me several times worried about the condition that the two girls were in. She could complain that they were getting thin, yet she refused to take either of them to the vet since she was now bitter about the amount of money she had to spend on the lump removal. I could only keep telling her that if she was worried, she needed to see a vet.
Two weekends ago she contacted me saying that she wanted to get rid of the girls. She didn't say why. I contacted both Godmother and SQ, who said that they would take them, but I also contacted a lady in my city named Raven. Raven said that she would take them for sure and give them a retirement home, since by this time they were 1 1/2 and 2 years respectively.
Arrangements were made for her owner to transport them to Raven's home on saturday. I stopped by to visit with Raven later that day, to see the girls, and I was shocked with what I seen.
I knew they were severely thin. Rosie, the 'plumper' of the two, could have every bone felt under no fat. Her coat was dull and parted, and her tail was bony and thin. Lydia on the other hand, was completely emaciated. You could see her ribs, feel every vertebrate in her back, her hip bones jutted out sickeningly, her tail was no more than a strip of bone covered with skin. She had no muscle, even her toes and feet had no muscle on them. Her coat was as dry as straw, and it parted at every sharp protrusion of bone. She was severely dehydrated, so much so that one couldn't even pinch a scruff on her. Worst yet, her organs could be felt with just the gentlest caress of her belly.
I was appalled, there's no other word for it. I knew the girls were thin, but they were even worse than the last time I seen them in January. How they had survived this long was just mind-boggling.
Raven immediately offered them baby cereal mixed with ensure plus, with which they wolfed down immediately. They were starving. Lydia also had an URI, and Raven immediately gave her a dose of baytril once she weighed her. She weighed only 8 ounces.
We spent the afternoon with the two girls, feeding them, cuddling them, comforting them. Rosie ate and eventually settled down to sleep. Lydia would eat, then she would get a burst of energy and she would wobble around for a few minutes. She was rickety and so, so weak. She jumped on our laps, yet there wasn't any strength to her. Then she would literally collapse, heaving for breath, and lay there until she got the strength back to eat again.
Lydia died Sunday afternoon. She was just too weak to make it. With no muscle on her, her body had nothing left to take from, and the food, no matter how much she ate, gave her no added strength. Rosie is doing better by leaps and bounds every day.
I write this so that those two girls can be remembered for their loving and kind nature, despite the cruelty they endured senselessly. I write this so that people know just how tough of a life they had, what they had to go through, but what kindness they were showed in the end, and how their lives have been cherished and will continue to be loved. Rosie will live on for her sister who was too weak to be able to, and Raven will nurse her back to health and give her the life she and her sister always deserved.
Over the next several months the girls lost weight, were never taken out of their cage or played with or socialized, and eventually they were given away to a wonderful lady named Raven.
The woman contacted me several times worried about the condition that the two girls were in. She could complain that they were getting thin, yet she refused to take either of them to the vet since she was now bitter about the amount of money she had to spend on the lump removal. I could only keep telling her that if she was worried, she needed to see a vet.
Two weekends ago she contacted me saying that she wanted to get rid of the girls. She didn't say why. I contacted both Godmother and SQ, who said that they would take them, but I also contacted a lady in my city named Raven. Raven said that she would take them for sure and give them a retirement home, since by this time they were 1 1/2 and 2 years respectively.
Arrangements were made for her owner to transport them to Raven's home on saturday. I stopped by to visit with Raven later that day, to see the girls, and I was shocked with what I seen.
I knew they were severely thin. Rosie, the 'plumper' of the two, could have every bone felt under no fat. Her coat was dull and parted, and her tail was bony and thin. Lydia on the other hand, was completely emaciated. You could see her ribs, feel every vertebrate in her back, her hip bones jutted out sickeningly, her tail was no more than a strip of bone covered with skin. She had no muscle, even her toes and feet had no muscle on them. Her coat was as dry as straw, and it parted at every sharp protrusion of bone. She was severely dehydrated, so much so that one couldn't even pinch a scruff on her. Worst yet, her organs could be felt with just the gentlest caress of her belly.
I was appalled, there's no other word for it. I knew the girls were thin, but they were even worse than the last time I seen them in January. How they had survived this long was just mind-boggling.
Raven immediately offered them baby cereal mixed with ensure plus, with which they wolfed down immediately. They were starving. Lydia also had an URI, and Raven immediately gave her a dose of baytril once she weighed her. She weighed only 8 ounces.
We spent the afternoon with the two girls, feeding them, cuddling them, comforting them. Rosie ate and eventually settled down to sleep. Lydia would eat, then she would get a burst of energy and she would wobble around for a few minutes. She was rickety and so, so weak. She jumped on our laps, yet there wasn't any strength to her. Then she would literally collapse, heaving for breath, and lay there until she got the strength back to eat again.
Lydia died Sunday afternoon. She was just too weak to make it. With no muscle on her, her body had nothing left to take from, and the food, no matter how much she ate, gave her no added strength. Rosie is doing better by leaps and bounds every day.
I write this so that those two girls can be remembered for their loving and kind nature, despite the cruelty they endured senselessly. I write this so that people know just how tough of a life they had, what they had to go through, but what kindness they were showed in the end, and how their lives have been cherished and will continue to be loved. Rosie will live on for her sister who was too weak to be able to, and Raven will nurse her back to health and give her the life she and her sister always deserved.