sitemap Gold Ribbon Rescue Adoptables

 

Hope

Age 1 1/2 - AVAILABLE SOON

Updated 1/21/12

 

Update 12/19/11 

It was just a few days before Thanksgiving when we got word of a young mom with eight brand-new pups (about 4 days old!) who desperately needed rescue: she’d given birth in the pound & had been immediately transferred to a vet clinic, but she couldn’t stay there. The Golden rescues closest to hand were full up. Could we help? Of course! Dainty little Hope hardly looked big enough or old enough to be a mom to four boys and four girls—she’s a petite 40-pounder…and a Golden for sure, albeit with a few non-standard “decorations” ( a white star on her chest, pretty white tips on her paws). We’ll tell you right now, though, that we aren’t sure who Dad was! The pups are all the right color, from blonde to caramel-gold, but they aren’t quite 100 percent  Golden. (Just 100% adorable!) They all got Thanksgiving-themed names: Grace, Blessing, Pumpkin, and Cranberry for the girls; Pilgrim, Sweet Potato, Butterball, and Wishbone for the boys.

 

For the first few days the pups seemed to be doing well—but on Thankgiving Day, foster parents Donna and Arne awoke to one terribly sick pup.  Little Pilgrim spent most of the holiday at the emergency vet, receiving fluids, oral antibiotics, and a through exam.  The vet checked over the rest of the litter, too, but they seemed chipper and healthy. “Since just the one is sick, it’s likely aspiration pneumonia,” she decided.  Unfortunately, by the very next day,  more pups were displaying the same symptoms, with nasal discharge and a terrible cough.  It was back to the vet for the entire pack, mom included. Now all of them were taking oral antibiotics, and we began nebulizing treatments with albuterol as well. Distressingly, though, the pups continued to lose ground, and on December 1, little Pilgrim lost the battle. X-rays revealed “the worst-looking lungs I’ve ever seen, just full of fluid,” said the vet sadly: he had extremely severe pneumonia.  There was no hope for recovery, and Pilgrim was euthanized.  We were devastated. 

To save the remaining pups, more aggressive treatment was in order. The vet came up with an antibiotic “cocktail” for us to use in the nebulizer. It took the help of several GRR folks and many phone calls to our wonderful vet network, but ultimately we were able to get our hands on the five ingredients for the cocktail (two of which aren’t readily available). Nebulizing treatments—with the pups being held one by one in  a parent’s lap, with their little muzzles in a breathing mask—continued  three times a day for almost two very stressful weeks, and the little family also were treated to group steam baths, all piled up in a big plastic tub and breathing in warm vapor to ease their lungs. Talk about round-the-clock care from a very dedicated foster family! Fortunately, the therapy worked—by the end of the course, they sounded almost normal. We then moved on to ten days or oral meds to make sure they didn’t back-slide.

… and now, we’re more than thrilled to be able to watch seven happy, healthy-looking puppies playing and wrestling with each other.  It's been two weeks since we've heard any coughs, or seen any discharge.  We still have them under a microscope, watching for any new symptoms, but at the moment it looks like they’ve made it through their illness, and are now robust little kids.  And hungry! (The reason they look so solemn in their holiday duds is that they’d just finished stuffing themselves and were feeling rather drowsy!)

In another three weeks, Mom and pups will be ready for their new, forever homes, and we know that their adorable little faces and sweet personalities will bring so much joy to their families.  Yes, they’re Goldens “plus” (as in, plus a bit of something else!), but they have that Solid Golden, cuddly personality.

… as does momma Hope. She is such a sweet, loving girl!  It’s impossible to find anything bad to say about her, other than her one habit of jumping up on us to say hi. She does it frequently, and we are working on it, but she does it so lightly that you hardly feel her feet on you.  She looks up at you with her beautiful dark golden brown eyes with the most loving gaze. 

She is wonderful on the leash, great in the yard, is starting to show us her personality now as she is transitioning from her role as a mom to being a more independent dog.  She loves to play with our year-old boy, Dudley.  She isn’t a barker, in fact I'm not sure if I've heard a bark out of her at all.  She is great with her food, no possessiveness at all. 

She’s tiny, and we have been working to get more weight on her, as her ribs were sticking out when she first arrived.  She’s a good mother, but as tiny as she is, and as large as the pups are getting, you can understand why she is losing the desire to nurse them!  The nursing is now very brief, but they are transitioning well to the formula and the puppy mush.  She has put on a couple of pounds, but she’ll never be a big girl.

Hope is wonderful with our cats, doesn't really even look at them.
 
She did try to escape from the yard for the first week, which surprised us as she had puppies in the house. I would say you need to be a bit careful around doors as she could be a bolter, but she has calmed down in that regard as she has been with us for a while. She does love her walks in the morning!

She is not destructive in the house at all, no counter surfing, no chewing, just a total love bug.  She doesn't have to be right next to someone all the time, but she certainly does love to cuddle.

NOTE: As a general rule, GRR does not adopt out dogs under the age of two to families with children under age five, and we also require that our puppy families have someone home much of the time while the pups are tiny. Long work hours away from home make it very hard to give pups the attention and socialization they need. Thank you for understanding! – your GRR MATCHMAKERS

Day 16 of Nebulizer Treatment

DAY 18 of Treatment

DAY 19 of Treatment

DAY 20 of Treatment