Tag Archives: no kill nation

Zoe

is our dog, who will be nine years old this month and we adopted from a shelter in Travis County TX, already spayed before six weeks of age. I’m a fan of early spay/neuter but five weeks is too early. Eight is OK with me.

Of course she is microchipped. Perhaps in the current Medien vs. Strickland case in Texas about what a dog is worth, they should consider our story.

I’ve spent decades bringing in homeless dogs and cats to see if we can find the owner via microchip or lost sign on a light pole, spaying and neutering feral cats and working at shelters.

We adopted our dog and she was very sick with coccidia and worms. Two months later the things she’d learned to do, like go up and down stairs, were no longer do-able. We had to amputate her hips at six and nine months. Don’t worry, she still loves the vet who did the surgeries!

If she was ever found, she’d be brought in and be euthanized as useless, while she can corner around a tree faster than any Retriever and kill a mouse in a heartbeat.

Zoe is not useless to us. She’s traveled across the country a couple of times, is a great companion and car dog, and we wouldn’t know what to do without her.

Zoe cannot be replaced. My old dog Chani will never be replaced and I have her photos, ashes and memories. I know the shelters don’t want to be held responsible for Oops! killing your dog or cat but didn’t Maddies’ Fund make any difference? The family couldn’t pay the charge immediately so they killed the dog?

Texas is not a state with many animal rights activities. Their feral cat solution is to shoot them, when in fact they may help with the mice and rats in the milk or hay barns.

My in-laws learned to deal with our “high-rise” dog and that she couldn’t be put up in a pen outside. After eight years she even gets petted or a treat from time to time, mostly when husband’s Mom and I are cooking and things get dropped.

Texans may get used to house pets once they realize they have to vacuum less often! Cheers from Dee and Z

A Normal Dog

I told Jim I just wanted one puppy in my life so I could have one “normal” dog. Zoe is far from normal. When Zoe was six weeks and already spayed (hello! that’s too young) we endured the application process and picked her but she was already taken so we looked at a male Bernese mix.

The next morning we got a call that the potential adopters passed on our Zoe (then named Camilla) and had the flea-ridden, worm-infested puff ball we named Zoe – Greek for Life – jumping out of the cardboard carrier onto my lap. Whenever she errs, my husband says “We should have gotten the dumb one!”

I must say she’s always been a traveler and loves the car. Pops her head up on an off-ramp or traffic light and sleeps all the time on the road.

We did have to take her hips out. She’s still cow-hocked as she’ll always be but can lose a Retriever around a tree in an instant. Just ask folks back home, they call her Swivelhips.

She can also kill a mouse and if she was paying attention this morning could have gotten her first squirrel, three feet away and grooming himself. He wanted to leave a pretty corpse! But I let her attentions go elsewhere so she only saw said squirrel when he was at least 15′ up the tree.

What is a normal dog? Ours loves people and other dogs, and cats, but will kill a mouse or squirrel. She loves her favorite toy. Anyone can reach into her food bowl and give or take food and she’s OK with it. I would trust her with anyone.

Does she like us? She follows and herds me because I’m the walk lady and food wench. My husband is the fun guy. I like to think that the shelter didn’t kill her, she lived to find people who care for her, and that we’re all luckier in the process. Here’s to a No Kill Nation, Dee