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Phoenyx

Rescue Representative
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Posts posted by Phoenyx

  1. Sorry Jules, no idea :worried_anim:

     

    Their vet doesn't sound particularly helpful. What a shame for such a young dog.

     

    ...same vet that gave penicillin to someone's guinea pig a few years back...

     

    Thanks folks, it does seem to be a mild form of wobbles but she is a very odd looking border collie and I suspect it's just a birth defect problem. I've referred them to a local vet who specialised in alternative meds, accupuncture may help her.

    I'll update when I hear more x

     

    we had a pup in foster last year who came in and developed very rapidly similar symptoms, i cant remember precise name but it was something which affected balance, coordination, she couldn't hold up her head for more than a few minutes and eventually her heart failed.She was on tablets to try and help and it did help for a short while but within weeks she dies in her sleep. No idea if this is the same thing or not. http://dogs.lovetoknow.com/wiki/Canine_Myasthenia_Gravis i think our pup had the congenital form which meant her body shut down on itself. There is a less severe version too that can be treated. No idea if this is anything similar or not.

     

    Dogs can also get wobblers syndrome like horses get ( http://cvm.msu.edu/hospital/special-facilities/advanced-rehabilitation-center-for-animals/services/neurological-disorders/wobbler-syndrome), this affects coordination etc and is also very serious. Sorry non of that is very cheery or helpful.hope your pup has something much less severe that can be treated.

    is it possible she's had an injury and maybe has a trapped nerve in her spine or something?

     

     

    Thank you for those x

  2. Hi folks

    A week or so ago I picked up a lost dog that looked like a collie cross, found the owner and it turns out that Lucy is from a pure working collie litter but was the runt and is, well, not quite right.

    She's about 18 mths, very small and has wobbly back legs, seems to be neurological and she goes all floppy when picked up (a bit like a ragdoll).

    She seems to be getting gradually worse but their vet can only suggest PTS... :-(

     

    Anyone got any suggestions for treatment/experience of this that I can pass on to the owner?

     

    Ta

    Jules

    xx

    • Like 1
  3. I was going to set Phoenyx Animal Refuge up a a registered charity a while back but as I run it mainly on my own it was a nightmare to try to get permission. I kept it as it is instead. Do LOTS of research and make sure you have a team of a few people round you that you can trust to help run it.

  4. We use the Pet Crematorium here:

    http://www.pet-crematorium.co.uk/site/

    Not near you but most areas have somewhere similar. The Phoenyx Hounds so far have all ended up being PTS at my vets and I've left almost all of them there to be collected. The Pet Crematorium collect them and I have the ashes returned in a casket a few days later.

     

    It's a difficult thing to discuss sometimes but basically this is what happens here:

    Depending on which vets you use the facilities vary. Most have a morgue - either a refrigerated room or a freezer - where they keep the bodies of our pets (sealed in a special body bag) until they are collected and taken for cremation. It's not nice to think of them being 'stored' but at the end it's only their shell that's left behind and it's not for long, I'm sure they wouldn't mind.

     

    The staff at our Pet Crem are exceptional. Whether they take the deceased pet from the vets or if you take them yourself they are handled with care and dignity. If we take an animal direct to them, they have a chapel of rest where they'll lay the pet out in state for you to say goodbye in private. :mecry:

     

    I've been asked before what happens to the small animals here at Phoenyx Animal Refuge when they die. Because I have a lot of animals (not as many as I used to these days) and most are old when they come here (and they come here for the rest of their lives, not to be rehomed), I see a lot die each year. I have my own 'morgue', a freezer where the little ones are kept until there are a few of them then they are taken to the Pet Crem for a group cremation and the ashes returned in a scatter box. Logistically I can't have separate cremations for every one, plus I like the idea that they don't go alone. Strange maybe but that's the way I do it.

    Hope that hasn't offended anyone...

     

    Jules

    x

  5. That's the thing that's killing me though Clare, I don't think I did. I wish so hard we had brought her home on Saturday, when she tried to get up as we left. She was so distressed. And it might not have changed the outcome, but at least she would have died at home, surrounded by everything that was familiar. When we went back on Sunday all the fight had gone out of her eyes and she wouldn't respond, not even for me. She must have thought we had abandoned her, and I can'tlive with that thought :mecry:

     

    I can't say don't go over things because you will, we all do :mecry: but you did the right thing by giving Tess the chance to heal herself. The damage to her neck meant that she couldn't get up but only full rest could have let you know that and she wouldn't have got that unless she was kept calm and away from 'normal'. Yes, with hindsight, it didn't bring the outcome we all hoped for but there was a chance that it could have.

    I'm sure most of us on here would have done something differently for one of ours if we could but you have to remember that you did what was the best option. You didn't abandon her, you came back, and she knew that. You were with her at the end, she knew you were there, and that's what she would have focused on and what matters. xxx

  6. I held my best girl in my arms this morning while she was put to sleep. I feel like my heart has been ripped out.

     

    Jules has been alongside me every step of the way this morning, so Princess Fairy Lurcher Tess had the two people she loved best in all the world, and who loved her, with her when she crossed over. And I can never thank Jules enough for what she's done for me and Tess today.

     

    Safe journey my pretty girl. I will see you again one day.

     

    From the day that Tess came into Phoenyx Animal Refuge she was very much a Phoenyx Hound but never 100% 'ours' in the way that so many dogs have been. Tess was destined to belong, heart and soul, to Julie Brammer and after 4 years here repairing her damaged little soul, Tess finally got to live with her true soulmate.

    Today Tess was taken from Julie, peacefully and with grace, and I am so grateful that I was able to be with her also at the end. Sleep safe Tess, you were one in a million and you will be missed for a very, very long time xx There's more than one heart breaking today for you x

     

    You know where I am JulesB xx

  7. I found my little cat, Treacle, half-paralysed early this morning. Emergency vet put him to sleep. He was only five. I just want him back :mecry: :mecry:

     

    Julie, I am so sorry that you've lost the little fella, he was a lovely (if somewhat strange - in the nicest possible way) cat and you gave him a fab life with you after he'd been unloved and uncared for. Gutted for you that he went so soon and so suddenly. :mecry:

     

    Sleep safe Treacle xxx

  8. Guinevere, 'Can Dash' born 22nd June 1996, left us for the bridge tonight, quietly and graceful as ever and happily eating coffee cake.

     

    Guin was my first greyhound, originally from Sheya and it's thanks to Lisa for trusting me with such a wonderful, and spooky, hound. Guin wasn't an easy dog, she was terrified of many things and it took a long time for her to feel safe again. Some of her demons never completely left her (thunder storms, gun shots etc) but she was truly a Lady of greyhounds, kind and gentle and very loving.

     

    Guin was 13 on Monday and that was a pretty good innings for her. Sadly she had developed a tumour on her top jaw, right along to her nose and it started to spread. Guin was too frail and it was in too awkward a place to be operated on so we spoilt her and kept her comfortable for as long as we felt was right.

     

    We made the decision today that we needed to let her go with dignity and before things got too difficult for her.

     

    Guin has left a huge hole here and we'll miss her terribly.

     

    Sleep safe sweetheart :GroupHug:

     

    e0adb156.jpg

     

    It doesn't get any easier :(

  9. My hounds are all back with me in caskets (rather a lot of them now :( ). I take their collar off them when they've gone (so far I've been with all of them at the vets) and it sits on my bedside cabinet until the casket comes back then both stay beside me until I feel able to put them on the special shelf in our wardrobe. Dylan wears Red's collar now though :wub:

    I'd like them to go with me when it's my turn, must remember to add that to my will :wacko:

  10. I am very pleased with my dogs today, they have both been out in the garden (with me and OH out there keeping watch) while the chooks were roaming and didn't even give them a look. Tess wasn't bothered even when one of the hens jumped over her while she was lying down :laugh:

     

    :ohno02:

     

    Way to go Tess!!! :biggrin:

  11. Looking at those 'before' pictures now he must surely have been almost beyond saving, poor lad.

     

    I love the one of him asleep on his blankets, home at last :wub:

     

    He very nearly was :mecry:

    Hen could hardly stand and weighed in at around 16kg.... instead of a normal 28kg, poor lad.

    We certainly didn't expect him to still be here. he's around 13yrs now...

    :wub:

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