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HMBMDC Rescue Report ~ January 2007

Jacob is a 4 year old male. His old home had no time for him anymore and left him outside chained to the house. During storms he would become so scared he would claw at the house and even break his chain to escape the fenced area and hide in a neighbors garage for protection. We have witnessed 1 storm with him and as long as he had someone to be near, he was fine. He was intact, and we had him neutered in November. He gets along with other dogs and likes to chase the cats. He was from a family with small children, and seems to like a lot. But Jacob has shown a side of stubbornness sometimes. When this shows up he will growl and seems upset and might act out. We just tell him to knock it off and go outside, and he complies and is fine afterward. But because of this we will not place him with children under 12.


jacob

He is very loving and looks much better than when he came here. His coat has turned from a dull gray to a nice black like its supposed to be. He likes to cuddle on the couch, and is happy lying on the tile.

Jacob was denied a real family life and is now eating up being a member of our pack. He is learning to play with other dogs and has started playing with toys. He is a larger Berner about 27 inches tall. He was 98 pounds when he came here and was very thin. He is now near 110 and looks great!!

He will make a wonderful companion for a family. Jacob will need a real fenced yard because of his past of roaming for females and hiding from storms. Since he's been here he has never even looked at the fence to try to get out.

Mack and Jacob
(Jacob is on the right)

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Sammy day 1
Sammy was in terrible shape, I'm sure he was only days away from starving to death. Oliver was very thin, but in better shape. Being stud dogs, they had to be kept separate or would violently fight each other. They were good with other dogs, just not each other. Sammy was so thin that you could put your fingers up INTO his chest cavity and feel the inside of this ribs, he also had heartworms, along with both having ear infections, and intestinal worms. Sammy weighted only 46 pounds and had a 3 inch waist. Oliver was 58 pounds and less matted no heartworms.

Sammy had dull lifeless eyes and looked as if he had given up on life. Oliver was more outgoing. We had to keep both separate with limited access to the yard, so they stayed in our pole barn, Sammy had more access to the yard, and Ollie had his own fenced area with constant ability to go freely from it to the pole barn. Sammy had run of the yard when we were home and we introduced him to life inside a home, he LOVED it. Both dogs made great progress putting on weight, until Oliver got sick and almost died from anemia. He had in internal bleed to the stomach or bowels. He was pot on steroids and got much better, for about 3 weeks. We moved him from the pole barn into our master bath. Oliver was very happy spending so much more time with us, and felt secure in his new air-conditioned room with his own private fan. Unfortunately, the bloody stools returned and his blood valued that we had been monitoring started to drop again. Oliver died on August 12th due to suspected rupture of cancer filled organs. His death was devastating to us, we felt so guilty not having been able to save him and let him know the love of a home. It was pointed out to us that he DID know love and DID have a family, us. So Oliver's remains will join Geordi and Cedar and our 3 golden's, as our family.

Sammy, on the other hand was doing unbelievably. With the assistance of BARC we were able to find a family that was willing to pay for Sammy's care and heartworm treatment, but they lived way out in California! These wonderful people agreed to pay over $1,100 before even touching him. Arrangements were made to fly Sammy out to San Francisco on August 7th . I had huge reservations about putting him on a plane with heartworms, but he had medical clearance, so he went. He arrived safely and his new family fell in love instantly. Sammy is now Nico and has his own little boy to play with. It's so odd that the dog we thought was not going to make it, did so well, and the one we though would do well did not survive.

Watching Sammy transform was so rewarding. His coat started to transform from a matted dull, red mess to a real Berner coat, he gained 15 pounds, smiled all the time, tail never stopped, but what I found most unbelievable was his eyes were full of life again, bright and shiny.

Sammy now lives in Santa Cruz CA. with his new family Stacey, Brian and son Patrick. It took a lot to turn Sammy into Nico, but just look at that happy face!

The support of the whole Berner community was wonderful. We kept several lists informed on the progress of these 2, and after Oliver's death, we receive a ton of moral support. We also received donations from several and offers to buy the rescue shirts from others. (We still have a ton of shirts available, great for holiday gifts!)

We also fostered Apollo for a few days and placed him within about a mile of his old home. They actually met while on a walk and Apollo showed fear of his old owner and cowered down when petted. Apollo's new owner could not miss the reaction and told him that Apollo was his dog now and stay away. Apollo had several issues of fear aggression and submissive peeing. Both have never once been seen at has new home.

We also assisted placing Oliver, Max and Lily. We did not foster these dogs, but served as the intermediary because the dogs had no major issues. Lily was an assist to a breeder that had her returned because she was shy. As it turned out, we placed Lily and Max together, both kinda shy and are doing great together. In fact Lily's breeder and the Erickson's are now fast friends and are in constant contact.

October so far has been very busy with contact of 5 dogs, plus another up to 26 from and Amish breeder. I contacted BARC about the Amish "breeder" that was getting rid of his Berners. the status on those is still undetermined as I writes this. The other 5, one is a breeder assist, one is a placement on a dog that we placed last year, Kismet, Layla and Jacob are fosters that we are working with.

Kismet is a very shy girl of 4 years. We have finished evaluating her and she needs a quiet home without a lot of visitors, and she will do great. It was a concern of her old home that she would never adjust to a new home. She loves it here and we think she will do fine in the right home. We are working with the breeders support on placing Kismet. Kismit's new favorite spot in the middle of our bed with her head on the pillows!

Layla is almost 2 and has no real major issue. Just a little shy at first with new people, big surprise for a Berner. She is an unruly adolescent that the owners did not take the time to train her. Now that she is big and bouncy, she is too much for them. The owner told me she is more of a small dog person and prefers her Lhasa Apso.

Jacob, we were just contacted about last night (10/19). He is reportedly huge for a Berner at 160 pounds! He is almost 4 and still intact. They also have not trained him and is chained outside when they are not home and will escape a 5 foot fence. Supposedly he gets along with other dogs and loves kids. We will be getting him next week for evaluation. Layla will be going to her new home this Sunday.

Bruce and Linda Whiteside, Rescue/Re-Homing Committee

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