Saturday, May 31, 2014

A Quiet Gentle Dog



A quiet gentle dog had been left abandoned in a kennel.

She was scared. She knew that she had been abandoned; familiar faces had been replaced with strange ones: indifferent, impatient, annoyed. She was not wanted. She worried from day to day that she would not be fed. She was afraid at night of strange noises in the darkness. The days passed in dreary boredom. People who didn't care about her made short business-like trips past her kennel.

Then one day a large man entered her fenced yard. He did not speak to her or smile. He stood with his arms held out from his sides to make his already massive shape appear wider. She rushed frantically back and forth along the fence, barking.

Behind him, outside the fence, strangers watched the man stalk her, shifting his ground, blocking her in, herding her toward a corner. She didn't know what the big man wanted, but he did not seem friendly.  She dodged about in panic, broke past the man, and ran into the side kennel adjacent to her fenced yard.

That was a mistake; now she was trapped.

The big man followed her. He was as wide as a wall and loomed over her. When she tried to dodge around him, he shifted his weight, blocking her escape. Fight or flight? She couldn’t flee and didn’t have any fight in her. Jinx hunched her back and dropped her tail, submitting herself to his mercy.

A hand the size of a frying pan swung toward her face.  Jinx cowered, but all he did was snap a leash on to her collar. He was going to take her away.  A small hope flickered in her heart; maybe she would be taken to a better place. She had been living alone in the enclosure for a long time, miserably cold in the winter, hot in the summer, and always lonely.  She trotted along beside the man, away from the enclosure, off to his truck.

 She didn’t know that a video of her “capture” was going to be used by a charlatan to promote himself as an expert in dealing with difficult dogs. She didn’t know that she had been labeled a biter. She didn’t know that she was going to be incarcerated in a dark filthy warehouse, trapped in a travel crate for years.

The man was Steve Markwell of the Olympic Animal Sanctuary and he had been contacted about a Jindo dog abandoned at a kennel. He used the opportunity of “rescuing” Jinx to have a video made of his self-proclaimed skill at “capturing” frightened dogs with bite histories. Here’s the video entitled "Low Stress Rescue in a High Stress Environment". The video is intended to be instructional; supposedly it is a demonstration of how to capture, without causing undo stress, a frightened dog that might bite.

Of course, anyone one watching this video can see that Jinx was badly frightened by Markwell, but could have easily been leashed up by any friendly person who refrained from intimidating her.

Here’s Jinx in the Olympic Animal Sanctuary:



Jinx is the dog in the bottom crate. She arrived at OAS in 2011, and was liberated about two years later. During those tow years she lived in an environment of enormous stress: noise, confusion, hunger, aggression. She was not spayed and was confined near unneutered male dogs.

But Jinx survived all of that--abandonment, exploitation, incarceration—as a gentle, quiet dog. She has forgotten that long ago leash training, but is learning new skills in her foster home. One of those skills is the art of lounging gracefully on the carpet! For a dog that has never experienced normal happy family life, she is doing very well!


Jinx is available for adoption and will soon go to a good home. Her story is testimony to the resilience of innate personality: No matter what bad experiences life dealt her, Jinx remained a  sweet dog. And now she is safe and ready to be loved.

 


 Keep smiling, Jinx! Life is only going to get better from now on!http://twodogfarms.com/Adoptable_Jindos.php



Thursday, May 29, 2014

The Eskies: Rceovering Slowly but Surely

The Eskies: Recovering Slowly but Surely

Just wanted to give you an update of the OAS dogs our rescue received from the AZ location on Jan 4th.  We saved the 4 American Eskimo/pommie mixes that came from Kennewick Puppy Mill in WA in May 2009 (Jackson, Joseph, Frances, Chester) plus one ??eskie/papillion?? mix named Goofy.

We have a facebook page set up for the 5 survivors we picked up, and my region has one of them (though still keeping his exact foster location private for obvious safety concerns).  https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Arizona-5/1445778852301768

These pics are of one of the dogs with urgent medical needs.  He had a large cyst hanging from his rear end.  First picture was taken in AZ at RUFFF.  The next one is of his bottom the next day during a bath and after some "Extreme Makeover Rescue Edition".  The next week, we had that cyst removed, dental (with one extraction), and his eyes looked at.  He is the dog in the OAS warehouse pics of him looking at a huge chunk of meat in his cage.

He can now walk really well on a leash and only occasionally eats his fecal matter (hurray for the baby steps)!  He only releases his glands sometimes when I pick him up, so that is a big improvement too!  His vision is poor but able to see most shapes and shadows.  Loves to play with other foster dogs, and is very fond of one that is just 10 lbs who has been showing him how to play with toys.  Still not adoptable yet but he's coming around.  Several years at the puppy mill and 4 years at the warehouse won't go away in just 5 months.  He is making strides, thanks to your efforts.  He and his 4 buddies are making great improvements.
  




  


  
T





Angel Merritt
West Coast Regional Director
  

Eskie Rescuers United, 501(3)c
http://eru.rescuegroups.org/info/adoption










This is Goofy, an Eskie mix.

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Seriously impressed

This blog site is very good.  The articles written so far show just how dedicated the rescue/activist community is.  Very impressed with Laura's article, and hope to see many many more, despite the fact that I don't seem to be able to comment directly on them.

Monday, May 26, 2014

A Dog Named Pixie: a Survival Story




Way out on the far side of the Olympic Peninsula is a town named Forks, and in that town there is a dilapidated warehouse once called the Olympic Animal Sanctuary. In that warehouse dog crates were once stacked up row on row, dozens of them, pee-stained and filthy. In one of those crates lived a dog named Pixie.


She wasn’t the only dog to spend time crated in the reeking darkness of the warehouse. For many years the warehouse was packed with dogs, over a hundred of them, crouching in cramped misery, unable to stretch their legs, unable to escape their waste, unable to do anything all day long and all night long except endure.


A few of the dogs were confined to small kennels lined with straw. For three years, before she was crated, Pixie had lived in one of the kennels. The manager of the “sanctuary”, Steve Markwell, modified her kennel by barricading it with plywood walls, leaving only a crack for light. That was his response to her aggressiveness toward other dogs: isolation. Sensory deprivation. Confinement in black hole.

The warehouse was supposed to be a paradise for unadoptable dogs. The website for the “sanctuary” promised exercise in compatible playgroups, homecooked meals, veterinary services, and rehabilitation for behavior problems. Some of the dogs confined there did have serious bite histories.  However, most were like Pixie: not perfect dogs, but adoptable to the right home.  Pixie’s problem was kennel-craziness.  She was over-active, demanding, puppyish. She was desperate for love and attention.


Pixie had experienced very little love in her life. She had been picked up as a stray and turned in to a Midwestern city shelter, just another pitbull, one of the millions of pitbulls turned in to shelters each year. And, like so many shelter pits, she came to the shelter young, untrained, undersocialized to dogs and pathetically, desperately needy.

 Pixie couldn’t handle life in a kennel. She lunged at the kennel door, barked too much, grabbed at people with her mouth. There was a young girl she loved who came to visit her, and some of the adult volunteers liked her, but no one adopted Pixie.  As the days passed she grew more stressed and anxious and needy.

Then time ran out for her. Her anxious neediness led to a bite incident and she was deemed unadoptable. That meant euthanasia unless an alternative placement could be found. And one was: the Olympic Animal Sanctuary.

Steve Markwell drove all the way out to the Midwest to pick Pixie up. He acted like he was doing everyone a giant favor, but Pixie was sent to him with a substantial donation. Her friends at the shelter threw Pixie a good-by party. They outfitted Pixie in a pretty pick sweater for her new life.They invested their faith in OAS to take care of their girl.

The shelter folks thought Pixie was going to heaven, but they sent her to hell. She, of course, had no idea why she was sentenced to a life of semi-starvation and close confinement in stink and noise of the warehouse. OAS became reality to her; the few good experiences given to her by the shelter workers receded in her mind, replaced by the daily experience of misery. Pixie endured for four years.

Four of the five years of her life were years of suffering.

 Then suddenly one night the manager and a few other men took the dogs out of the warehouse one by one. When it was Pixie’s turn, she got one quick lungful of fresh air outside the warehouse before finding herself once again confined to a small dark space: a wooden box. She, and all of the other dogs, were on a truck. The truck lurched into motion. The dogs barked their worries and questions as the truck rolled away.

Pixie didn’t know it, but once again people were concerned about her welfare. Not the driver of the truck; no, the dogs only mattered to him as props for his pose as a rescuer. The people who cared about Pixie were the thousands who had seen the photograph of her sad face in the darkness of her kennel. Her picture, and pictures taken by the Forks police of the warehouse interior, had been posted on Facebook, exposing OAS for what it really was: a hellhole. Thousands of people were writing, calling and emailing Forks authorities, trying to free the dogs so they could be placed in legitimate rescues. Protests had been held outside the warehouse. Lawsuits had been filed. Consumer fraud complaints had been lodged with the state Attorney General. Many of the rescues that had sent dogs to OAS desperately tried to get their dogs back. Among those were the volunteers who had sent Pixie to OAS.

The driver of the truck was running away from the protesters and rescuers. He knew he didn’t have the resources to feed the dogs.  He knew that sooner or later he was going to have a warehouse full of dead dogs, but he didn’t want to give the dogs to the people who were trying to rescue them. So he took the dogs and ran.

But he also knew that if he drove long enough, he would end up with a truck full of dead dogs. So after six hours on the road he agreed to turn the dogs over to a rescue, one that had not been involved in the lawsuits or protests.

The Guardians of Rescue, a New York group, agreed to help the dogs. Markwell insisted that the turnover site be far away from any cities and not in Washington. The Guardians found a place: RUFF House, a rescue in Golden Valley, Arizona.

It took Markwell four days to drive to Arizona. He stopped for food, water and potty breaks for himself, but not for the dogs. By the time they arrived at the rescue site, Pixie, like all of the dogs, had been laying her own waste for days, hungry, thirsty and terrified. Two of the dogs were nearly dead from dehydration and starvation.

Pixie did not know what was going to happen to her next. Since her life so far had been a progression from bad worse, her expectations were not good. A photo taken just after she was unloaded from the truck shows her bellycrawling on the ground.  But, within minutes, she found herself in a spacious clean outdoor kennel. She had a dog house. She had a bucket of fresh water. She had food. People gave her treats and spoke to her. She could see other dogs, see birds flying overhead, could smell the sagebrush and the grasses and the wind…

The explosion of sensory was overwhelming, but time heals and routine is comforting. Pixie learned that people would give her attention and be kind to her. She got food and water on a schedule. She grew familiar with the smells and sounds. She recognized her caretakers and grew to enjoy their visits. She was able to relax in the sun, just stretch out, breath deeply, feel the warmth, close her eyes and dream. For the first time in many years Pixie was able to feel a little happiness.

Meanwhile those volunteers who had worked to free Pixie from OAS searched for a sanctuary for her, a place for her to live for the rest of her life. And back in Washington state a woman who had never met Pixie made a commitment to rescue her. That woman raised money and birddogged the process tirelessly to see that Pixie got the OK to go to a new home.

Pixie’s story will have a happy ending.  She will be going to a rescue in Virginia where she will have a home as long as she needs one. This story will be updated when Pixie finally arrives in her new home.

Updates: Pixie is going to a small rescue in Virginia to join two other OAS dogs, Hercules and Rogue. Here's a picture of her in a crate, loaded for departure. The transporters were told of her love of Doritos and had a supply on hand for her.






After a long trip across country from Arizona to Virginia, Pixie arrived at the rescue and was introduced to her new home kennel. At first she was confused, tired, and a bit growly. By the next day, she was wagging her tail to greet people and sniffed noses with another dog, a potential friend. She takes treats nicely and knows "sit" and "down"--GOR's crew in AZ must have taught her that!This morning Pixie was so relaxed while chewing her pig's ear that she didn't even want to get off her bed! Over the next weeks Pixie will be introduced to other dogs, taken for walks, and otherwise introduced to new experiences.


She's come a long ways. From the Midwest to the Northwest to the Southwest to the East Coast. From loneliness, fear and sensory deprivation to a home with people who love her and dogs that could be her friends. From isolation and confinement to enrichment, choices and movement. Pixie, we love you. Thank you so much, Nikki, for giving this girl her happy ending.

 

 


 







Sunday, May 25, 2014

How to use oasisdogs.blogspot.com


Luna has been adopted!


Anyone can look. You must join to comment. If you want to become an Author and post new topics  please PM Lydia with your preferred email address. It doesn't have to be with Google but it helps.

1) Once you get your invitation to post, sign into Google with your normal password, and ID. If you don't have one, it's simple to get one, just go to Google.com, and join.

2) Go back to the invite, and click on it. It should take you to the blog. There is no separate password. Once you're on, you're on until you quit or are deleted. You can access the blog through Google, too.

3.) Now that you're an Author, you can post new topics. Go up to the top of the page and click on New Post. Another page will open for your text and/or image/video.

4.) When you're done entering information, go back to the top and click PUBLISH.
If you forget the last step your work will be lost. Try it with a sentence or two -- it can always be deleted.

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

What's all this then?



Hey!


Rescues/ Adopters:

Help celebrate the survivors of the terrible Olympic Animal "Sanctuary" in Forks, WA by posting your success stories.  To do that, please join this blog and let me know. I'll make you an official poster. Everyone is invited to comment.

Pro-OAS comments will be deleted ... so why bother?

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

LEROY





Leroy is ready for Adoption

I am already neutered, housetrained, in need of an experienced adopter, up to date with shots, not good with dogs, and not good with cats.
Leroy's Story...
Leroy is an approximately 7 year old Pit mix who is such a joy to be around! He loves all people and would love nothing more than to cuddle with you. He spent 5 years in a hoarding situation, so we are carefully looking for a home that will be dedicated to loving Leroy for the rest of his life (or a foster home to help while we wait for that home)!
Leroy told us what he's looking for in a foster or a forever home, so we thought we'd just let him share it in his own words!
"It may sound a bit selfish on my part, but I am not a fan of other dogs or cats, I would like to shower you with attention all by myself! I would love someone that "gets" me - a dog savvy person is a must!" I even have my own Facebook page - check me out! https://www.facebook.com/pages/Leroy/264220677068110

Leroy is crate-trained and potty-trained. $225 adoption fee applies. All of our dogs are spayed/neutered, vaccinated and microchipped. We do a 30-day trial adoption and if it's not a good fit during that period, we will refund 75% of the adoption fee.

***We frequently fall into spam folders, so if you haven't heard back from us in 24-48 hours, please check there***