Isn' t that a great story!!  I love happy endings!

-------Original Message-------
 
From: Kavi
Date: 12/10/2010 10:01:49 PM
To: Chihuahuas
Subject: [Chihuahuas] Fw: [all_chihuahuas] Pet Goat and Two Dog Pals Saved
>From Sheriff and the Street
 
  



My Chi Ricky... Is A HeartBeat  At My Feet



Kavis Christening n Communion Store

Visit my eBay Store: http://stores.ebay
com/Kavis-Christening-n-Communion-Store






 


--- On Fri, 12/10/10, Judie <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Judie <[email protected]>
Subject: [all_chihuahuas] Pet Goat and Two Dog Pals Saved From Sheriff and
the Street
To: "Judie Wellman" <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, December 10, 2010, 6:16 AM


  
 
A heartwarming story to share...
 






Pet Goat and Two Dog Pals Saved From Sheriff and the Street 
By Diane Herbst | Tuesday, December 7, 2010 9:17 PM ET
This stray goat (who acts like a dog), Great Dane and Retriever are an
inseparable — and unlikely — trio.

It all started in early July on the grounds of a palatial Dallas-area
wedding chapel. On the sprawling lawn lounged a goat and a Great Dane, who
were taken to the nearby East Lake Pet Orphanage.
This was no usual couple. At the orphanage, Judy the Great Dane, and
Minnelli the goat, were inseparable.
"This is definitely the most unusual inter-species match-up of pets I've
ever seen," says Dr. Karen Fling, the veterinarian who founded the orphanage
and owns the East Lake Pet Hospital that services -- for free -- the
orphanage.
"They acted like a married couple, Judy and Minnelli are bonded at the hip.
They eat together, sleep together, huddle around in a little ball and sleep
together. It is very sweet."
Media coverage of the cuddling couple caught the attention of the Dallas
County sheriff's office. In Texas, Fling soon learned, it is illegal for
someone to harbor stray livestock. "This is all news to me," Fling says. "I
had no idea this law was on the books."
Fling tried to work something out with the deputy sheriff overseeing the
case. But there was nothing Fling could do as Minnelli was taken to the city
animal impoundment facility, locked up with other homeless goats.
If Minnelli remained unclaimed by her owners, she'd be transferred to a town
called Mexia, sold at a livestock auction for about $25, and end up as
someone's dinner. "It was heartbreaking for us," Fling says, "to think a pet
that walks on a leash, goes for walks like a dog and is a house pet could be
sold to be eaten."
However, this was no ordinary goat. Thanks to media coverage of Minnelli's
plight and the subsequent public outcry, the Dallas County Commissioner
declared at a press conference: "It's not going to be auctioned off. I'll
guarantee that."
Soon after, Minnelli and Judy's owners surfaced, and handed ownership of the
pair to Fling. They also gave her their three-legged retriever, Lucky. "He
was pining away at home," says Fling, "missing the other two."
Finally reunited, over 200 families inquired about adopting them. But first,
the ten veterinarians at the hospital (in the same building as the
orphanage) donated their time to spay, neuter, and de-worm the dogs.
After the dogs healed, Norman and Sandra Williams of Ennis, Texas adopted
the trio on November 27. The "three amigos" as Sandra calls them, join her
cats, dogs, horse, llama, birds, chickens, geese, and ducks on 3 acres. 
They're doing great and they'll be happy here for the rest of their lives,"
says Sandra. "They walk around like a little troop; where one goes, the
others go. They just capture your heart."
For more information on this unique pet hospital and orphanage, go to www
elpo.org or www.welovepets.net.





 

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