Blind Pit Bull Abandoned on Park Bench Enjoying New Forever Home

APRIL 27, 2016 UPDATE: After enjoying several months getting plenty of love in her forever home, Poly passed away tonight.

“She had a good day,” wrote Poly’s “ghostwriter” on her Facebook page. “She had a photo shoot in her new dress and got to spend lots of time getting loved on by Vanessa. … At 10 p.m. she was settling into her fluffy blanket when she had a sudden major heart episode. She stopped breathing… and although we administered CPR for more than 20 minutes, she did not recover.

“She was surrounded by her rescue ladies when she passed… we are very thankful that we were both there.”

Rest in peace, sweet Poly, and much gratitude to those rescue ladies who made the past six months so wonderful for this special girl.

To help other other injured, abused and neglected dogs find loving homes just as Poly did, you can make a donation in her memory to Polysfund.org

It’s bad enough abandoning a dog in a park, but it’s even more despicable when that dog is blind.

That’s what happened in October to a sweet, 3-year-old Pit Bull mama who had recently had puppies. She was left, wearing a harness, on a bench in a Santa Maria, Calif., park.

A good Samaritan notified the police. The dog, who’d been too terrified to move, was taken to Santa Barbara County Animal Services.

When Jennifer Wales, president and founder of Foreverhome Pet Rescue, saw the Pit Bull’s photo on the shelter’s Facebook page, she immediately got on the phone.

“They told me they needed a rescue commitment,” Wales told ABC News Oct. 30. “I’ve been rescuing dogs for 25 years. She reminded me so much of another dog that changed my life, who was also a blind Pit Bull.”

Wales took the dog, whom she named Poly, and had her checked out by a veterinarian. The diagnosis was not good. In addition to being permanently blind from birth, Poly had congenital heart disease, as well as ringworm and a skin condition resulting in scabs.

Because of Poly’s congenital heart condition, Wales told the Santa Maria Sun in November that anyone who obtained a Pit Bull puppy in the Santa Maria area in the late summer or early fall should have the pup’s heart checked. If the disease is detected within the first few months of a dog’s life, it can be reversible.

Unfortunately, that was not the case for Poly.

To raise money for heart surgery, Wales launched the Poly the Blind Pibble crowdfunding campaign. Her goal of $3,000 was quickly met. The rest of the donations, via the new Poly’s Fund, will be “distributed to small nonprofits that have dogs that need expensive diagnostics with specialists,” Wales told ABC News.

Poly has been placed in a foster home, where she is “thriving,” Wales told ABC News in October. “She’s so sweet and loving.”

Although Poly will never again have to go through the unimaginable terror of being left alone in a strange place, her days in a loving forever home may be numbered.

Wales told ABC News Dec. 3 that due to Poly’s heart condition, her life expectancy is only two months to two years.

Those precious days will be filled with pampering from her foster family.

“Her activities are limited, but there’s lots of loving and hugging and petting,” Wales said.

Poly is also getting used to car rides and socializing with people. “Since she is nervous around new voices, we are trying to at least briefly expose her to more and more people so she can learn to trust again,” Wales told ABC News.

“She is playful and bouncy, not so much with toys as with people. But she can’t get too riled up for more than a couple of minutes or she will start coughing and faint due to her condition.”

You can keep up with Poly’s adventures on her Facebook page, Poly – Blind Pibble.

“I have SO MUCH to be thanking for this year!” Poly “wrote” on Thanksgiving Day. “Fluffy beds, cheeses, rescue ladies, trips to the park, warm sweaters and jackets, lots of new friends, nice heart doctors and eye doctors.”

Here’s hoping this beautiful girl proves her prognosis wrong and goes on to enjoy being loved for many years to come.

To make a donation to Poly’s Fund, click here.

Photos via Facebook

RECALL ALERT: Dave’s Simply the Best Dog Food

Dave’s Pet Food is voluntarily recalling one batch of Dave’s Simply the Best dry dog food due to an off odor.

According to a letter posted on Dog Food Advisor, the batch was recalled in response to a consumer complaint last month. When Dave’s Pet Food, which is based in Agawam, Mass., tested a sample, it was found to have a high peroxide value, indicating rancidity.

“No outdated materials were used; however, it was noted on a subsequent production run of another product that the rice bran being used had an off odor,” wrote Bill Hufnagle, plant manager of Southern Tier Pet Nutrition, in a letter to Dave Ratner of Dave’s Pet Food. “This product contains rice bran and could have been the source of the off odor.”

The remaining rice bran was discarded.

The recalled dog food products have the code date BUB Oct 15 16. According to The Truth about Pet Food, 90 percent of the recalled food was sold in the company’s own Dave’s Soda and Pet City stores and has already been removed from shelves. Other retailers were asked to pull the affected products as well.

For more information about the recall, call Dave’s Pet Food at 888-763-2738 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. EST Monday through Friday, or email dave@davespetfood.com.

Photo via YouTube

Hero Saves Pit Bull Dumped on Busy Interstate

Bill Kramer, who owns a towing and hauling business, was driving with his dog down busy Interstate 94 in North Dakota Monday when he saw the unthinkable: Someone pushed a Pit Bull out of a car and onto the busy highway.

The dazed dog sat between lanes as traffic rushed by her at 75 mph.

Kramer immediately stopped and used the 30-foot trailer he was towing to block traffic. He got out of his truck and, crawling on his hands and knees, approached the dog. She was bleeding and had a broken leg.

“At first, I thought, ‘This is stupid. I’m going to get run over,'” Kramer told the Bismarck Tribune. But he knew if he left her there, she would not survive. “I was nervous for her.”

The scared Pit Bull — Kramer named her Celine Dion — wouldn’t budge until Kramer’s own dog jumped out of the truck and succeeded in getting her to follow him back inside the cab.

When Kramer got home, he made a Facebook post about the dog whose live he’d saved.

“That’s when all hell broke loose,” he told the Bismarck Tribune. He got responses from across the country from people wanting to make donations to pay for Celine’s care, or to send pet supplies. Adoption offers also poured in.

Celine was treated for her fractured leg and some facial trauma at West Dakota Veterinary Clinic. She’ll need to wear a cast for a few weeks, but is expected to make a full recovery.

“It was certainly a horrific incident for the dog and for the man that rescued it,” the clinic’s Kim Brummond told the Bismarck Tribune.

Kramer received about $850 in donations to help pay Celine’s vet bill. “That was kind of cool how people banded together to do something,” he told the Bismarck Tribune.

A friend of his has adopted Celine, and Kramer said he’ll post photos on Facebook of the lucky dog’s progress.

Until he rescued Celine, Kramer said he had only heard negative things about Pit Bulls.

“She’s a sweet, sweet dog,” he told the Bismarck Tribune. “It definitely tugs at my heartstrings.”

Photos via Facebook

Planned Parenthood Gunman Previously Shot Neighbor’s Dog

Before he murdered police officer Garrett Swasey, mother of two Jennifer Markovsky and Iraq war veteran Ke’Arre Stewart at the Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs Friday, Robert Lewis Dear had a long criminal record.

Among those crimes was a charge of animal cruelty, according to police reports provided to the Daily Beast by the Colleton County Sheriff’s Office in South Carolina.

In November 2002, as a dog belonging to Dear’s neighbor, Douglas Moore, walked down the driveway, “a shot was fired from [a] residence next to his and Douglas’s dog yelped out and ran over to him.”

The dog, who had been shot with a pellet gun, survived.

Dear insisted he didn’t shoot his neighbor’s dog — yet he told the two deputies who responded to Moore’s call, “Douglas was lucky that it was only a pellet that hit the dog and not a bigger round.”

He was found not guilty of animal cruelty.

“These aspects of his personal profile come as no surprise to those of us who are familiar with the established link between violence against humans and cruelty to animals,” wrote Wayne Pacelle, president of the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), on his blog yesterday. (Serial killers Robert Durst, Jeffrey Dahmer and Ted Bundy all started out by torturing animals.)

“In fact, the investigation and prosecution of crimes against animals is often an important tool for identifying people who may become perpetrators of violent crimes against people,” Pacelle wrote. “When we work with law enforcement on animal fighting crimes, we see plenty of evidence of criminality and interpersonal violence committed by these thugs.”

Next month, Tennessee will become the first U.S. state to have an animal abuse registry. It will contain the names, current photographs and other identifying data of adults who have been convicted of felonies including aggravated animal cruelty, felony animal fighting, bestiality and other offenses.

The registry will make it easier for animal shelters and rescue organizations to identify people who should never have pets. And since animal abusers often move on to violence against people, it could prove helpful to law enforcement.

In September 2014, for the first time ever, the FBI started keeping track of animal cruelty crimes in its Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program. Although this was too late for Dear’s victims, hopefully it will help save the lives of others, whether they have two legs or four.

Photos via Twitter; Twitter; Twitter

WITHDRAWAL ALERT: Hill’s Science Diet Canned Dog Food

Hill’s Pet Nutrition has voluntarily withdrawn some of its Hill’s Science Diet canned dog food from PetSmart stores, Truth About Pet Food reported Friday.

Signs posted in PetSmart stores late last week announced the withdrawal and listed the affected products, but did not disclose the reason. Hill’s Pet Nutrition has not yet released any official information about the withdrawal on its website or social media accounts.

“The reason for this ‘withdrawal’ of some of the products was a printing error of information on the labels. The food is NOT an issue at all,” wrote K9Jeeper, who identified herself as a Hill’s rep, in a comment on Dog Food Adviser.

“When the packaging is corrected, the items will be re-labeled and distributed.” K9Jeeper added that it will take two to three weeks.

According to the signs posted in PetSmart stores, all date codes of the following products have been voluntarily withdrawn:

  • Science Diet Dog Adult Perfect Weight
    12.8 oz
    SKU 5210092
    UPC 5274229750
  • Ideal Balance Slim & Healthy Chicken
    12.8 oz
    SKU 5210280
    UPC 5274230770
  • Science Diet Dog Small & Toy Adult Beef Entrée
    5.8 oz.
    SKU 5092280
    UPC 5274249660
  • Science Diet Dog Small & Toy Mature Beef Entrée
    5.8 oz
    SKU 5092282
    UPC 5274249680
  • Science Diet Dog Adult Beef Entrée
    13 oz.
    SKU 5117274
    UPC 5274270390
  • Science Diet Dog Adult Beef & Chicken Entrée
    13 oz.
    SKU 5117273
    UPC 5274270400
  • Science Diet Dog Mature Beef Entrée
    13 oz.
    SKU 5117275
    UPC 5274270560

For more information about the recall, call Hill’s Pet Nutrition at 800-354-4557 Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. CST.

Photo via TruthAboutPetFood.com

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