RIP Pickles: 5-Pound Dog Saves Family from Bear

A toy Poodle named Pickles may have weighed only 5 pounds, but he wasn’t afraid to stand up to a bear weighing 150 to 200 pounds that entered his home in Black Mountain, N.C., early Friday morning.

“I thought I was gonna die,” Tiffany Merrill, Pickles’ owner, told WNCT. She had opened a door to let her little dog out for his morning walk when the aggressive intruder walked inside the house.

Merrill’s two children were asleep in their bedrooms. She knew that if she ran to them, the bear would chase after her and perhaps kill them all. So, yelling to her kids to close their doors, she tried to hide behind a couch — but the bear jumped on the couch.

As Merrill envisioned the bear killing her and then her children, she heard Pickles barking. Her dog was able to chase the bear outside. As Merrill watched in horror, Pickles and the bear got into a scuffle.

“There was nothing I could do,” Merrill told WLOS. “I wanted to go out there and jump on the back of the bear and save my dog.”

Amazingly, Pickles initially survived his attack by the bear nearly 40 times his size, but the hero dog died after Merrill rushed him to a veterinarian. “He did not make it — he died saving my life,” Merrill wrote on Facebook.

Pickles had been a member of the Merrill family for four years. “He was always with me,” Merrill told WNCT. “If I stayed up late, he stayed up late. If I wanted to go somewhere, he wanted to go somewhere.”

Merrill hopes her dog’s tragic death will make her neighbors more aware of bears and encourage them to take precautions to protect all their family members.

How to Protect Your Family from Bears

Education specialist Lauren Pyle with the Western North Carolina Nature Center told WLOS there’s been a lot of bear activity in the area, which is expected to increase even more as the weather cools and these animals prepare for hibernation.

Pyle said she doesn’t know for sure why the bear entered Merrill’s house, but she said these incidents usually happen when bears become too accustomed to people. “They’re definitely going to be hungry now,” she told WLOS. “They’re definitely opportunists when it comes to finding food, so they will go after whatever is easiest.”

If there are bears near where you live, Pyle offers these tips:

  • Never approach a bear.
  • Keep your property as clean as possible. “Like the trash being left overnight or unsecured, or bird feeders, or outside pet food storage, or even just BBQ grills that are left out with all that juicy, meaty goodness all over it,” she told WLOS.
  • Remember that bears are actually afraid of people. If they do start running, it doesn’t mean they’ll want to run right up to you.

Photo: Tiffany Merrill/Facebook

Pot-Bellied Pig and Her Pooch BFFs Need Forever Home Together

NOV. 25, 2015 UPDATE: Happy news! Paprika, Pickles and Pattie the Pig have been adopted together by Blue Hound Farm in Lewisberry, Pa., WPVI reports. According to the farm’s website, it’s home to horses, sheep, goats, cows, pigs, ducks and more. “Triple P” will be off to join the rest of the menagerie Friday.

Paprika, Pickles and Pattie, who are inseparable, are ready to be adopted together into a forever home.

Paprika, 4, and Pickles, 2,  are female and male Chihuahua/Pomeranian mixes. Pattie is a 2-year-old pot-bellied pig. The trio, referred to as “Triple P” by the Animal Rescue League of Berks County, was left in the stray building at the Pennsylvania shelter in September.

“They sleep together. They do everything together, go for walks together,” Sarah McKillip, manager of the shelter, told WFMZ. “The littlest one rides the pig’s back, and they’re like a real family.”

The one thing Triple P does not do together is eat, McKillip jokingly told ABC News, because Pattie the Pig will scarf up the dogs’ food as well as her own.

McKillip said the trio is often in cahoots with each other. “When we first got them, we once moved everyone outside to clean the kennels, but Pattie found a way to open the door into the kennel and let the two dogs in,” she told ABC News. “We had to chase the three of them through the kennel. It was hilarious.”

When they were abandoned at the shelter in September, both dogs were infested with fleas and had little hair from the neck down. Two months later, they’re both flea-free, healthy and energetic.

Both dogs are well trained. Like her two buddies, Pattie, who weighs 120 pounds, is also housebroken.

“She’s obviously not small. She gets a little bit grumpy like some pigs do, so it’s a tough sell,” McKillip told WFMZ.

So far, most potential adopters are interested in either the dogs or the pot-bellied pig, but not all three. If no one is willing to give Triple P a forever home, the shelter may have to separate the BFFs.

“It will be heartbreaking to watch Pattie, because she would probably be the one that’s left behind,” McKillip told WFMZ as her eyes filled with tears.

“They are a family, which is what breaks my heart to have to separate them. The staff, we cry about it when we think about separating them, and I’m getting emotional right now. I don’t want to separate them, so please come help.”

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

The Animal Rescue League has been receiving a lot of inquiries about Triple P “and a few viable candidates both locally and out-of-state that we’re looking into,” McKillip told ABC News. “The only thing is that we prefer people with pig experience or really willing to learn and research about taking care of pigs. We also want to make sure the potential adopter’s township doesn’t have any laws against owning pigs.”

Potential adopters can try fostering Triple P for a few weeks to see how it works out before making it official. The Animal Rescue League will waive the usual adoption fees.

If everything works out, “We will send them home with everything we have for them, and we will give you a big hug!” McKillip told WFMZ.

Anyone interested in adopting Paprika, Pickles and Pattie can email McKillip at smckillip@berksarl.org or call 610-373-8830.

Photo via Facebook

Exit mobile version