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Galton - The Dog With Nine Lives

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Galton The Dog With Nine Lives
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The Dog With Nine Lives: summary, description and annotation

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When Della found a stray dog living wild with her thirteen puppies on a beach in Rhodes she was determined not to get involved. But fate had other ideas and Della brought Lindy back to England. Lindy had already proved herself to be a true survivor, but she was more of a survivor than Della had ever dreamed. Over the next eight years she survived a series of events, any one of which might have finished off a lesser dog than Lindy. They included: being stampeded by a herd of angry cows; a rare life threatening form of anaemia; being swept down the river after chasing ducks; falling out of a car travelling at speed, and getting lost for a night in a forest. The Dog with Nine Lives is both poignant and humorous. Dog lovers will love it. It is the true story of a very special dog.

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THE DOG WITH NINE LIVES
THE DOG WITH NINE LIVES

Della Galton

Published by Accent Press Ltd 2010

ISBN 9781907726330

Copyright Della Galton 2010

The right of Della Galton to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the publisher: Accent Press Ltd, The Old School, Upper High St, Bedlinog, Mid-Glamorgan, CF46 6RY

For Maggie Avgerinou with love and thanks, and
every other anonymous dog rescuer working
tirelessly out there

Acknowledgements

I would like to thank the following people: all those lovely people on Pefkos beach who helped with the rescue; all at RAWS, especially Maggie Avgerinou; Sandra and Colin Forrest; Dominic Groves; Tony and Adam Millward; Knightwood Quarantine Kennels; All at Walton Lodge Veterinary Group, especially Kate and Jenny. All at Weatherbury Veterinary Clinic, especially Philippa; Jo and Paul at Tricks4Treats.

CHAPTER ONE

I will not get involved

I COULDNT REMEMBER THE last time Id felt so content. The hot sun burned down on my face and beyond my closed eyelids sun patterns danced. I could hear the swish of the sea and the shouts of children playing in the waves, and the scent of burgers from a nearby caf wafted on the faint breeze.

This was the life, I thought in my half dozing stupor. After a hectic week in Rhodes where Id been taking photographs at my sister-in-law, Sandras, wedding it was lovely to be able to relax for a while. Wed been here four days. It was my first visit to the picturesque island, and I was planning to come again.

Suddenly my idyll was shattered by a cold wet hand dripping sea water on to my arm and an urgent voice in my ear.

Look, Della, theres a dog.

Ive seen one before, I said, still half asleep and determined to stay that way.

Its a stray dog. Its really cute. Go on, have a look. Sandra isnt the type to give up easily.

I opened one eye and caught a blurred image of a dog running by in the soft sand.

Lovely, I said, because I was obviously expected to say something.

I thought you liked dogs. Sandras voice was disgruntled.

I do like dogs.

What sort do you think it is?

I opened both eyes now and squinted against the glare. The dog was chocolate brown with floppy ears and a skinny stick of a tail.

A right mixture maybe a bit of Labrador. I shouldnt think shes a pedigree!

My irony was wasted on Sandra, but after that, she left me to my dreams again, and my dreams were of dogs. I wasnt really indifferent to them, far from it. I had three of my own at home, all of them rescue dogs. To be honest, I was more worried that I might get involved and I couldnt afford to care too much about stray dogs in Greece.

Although I admired people who rescued dogs from horrendous lives in other countries, I was strongly of the opinion that if you had that sort of money going spare, it would be better spent in England. How many dogs could be helped for the cost of bringing just one stray into the UK? Shouldnt charity begin at home?

Id rescued lots of dogs across the years, which was something Sandra knew very well, but there was no way I was getting involved with this one. She seemed quite happy running about on the sand, and scrounging food from holidaymakers.

I watched her for a while. She was pretty smart. She would suss out her target first, presumably to establish whether they were likely to be an easy conquest or whether shed get a boot for her trouble, and having decided, she would tailor her approach and either crawl forward on her belly or go sideways, very tentatively.

If they were encouraging and held out a hand or spoke to her, shed get up, wag her tail and trot over, and then sit patiently waiting for her reward. She took everything that was offered, crusts of bread, bits of meat, chips, with or without tomato sauce, but I noticed that she didnt immediately gobble everything down.

She usually ate the meat straight away, but other things she would hold in her mouth. I saw one lady give her a burger bun, which she took with delicate precision. It was as if she didnt want to be rude and turn something down, but obviously burger buns werent a hot favourite of hers, and she didnt immediately eat it.

Once the woman had turned away, she retreated to a safe distance and dropped it in the sand. She obviously wasnt starving then, I thought with a wry smile. She was almost certainly not in need of rescue, which was just as well!

Most of Sandras family had come over for the wedding. The youngsters were staying in Rhodes old town within walking distance of the pubs and clubs. My husband Tony and I and his 14 year-old son Adam were staying in apartments close to the beach.

The day before our holiday ended, when I was stretched out on a sun lounger, catching up on my holiday reading, Sandra came running across.

That stray dogs got puppies in a cave up in the rocks, she said breathlessly.

Has she? I sat up, still not really wanting to get involved.

Yes, and we need your help. Sandras voice grew more urgent. One of them has crawled away and it cant get back and the mother cant reach it.

If it had crawled in one direction, I knew it could probably crawl back in the other, but nevertheless I sat up.

Why do you need my help?

Because none of us can reach it either, but youve got long arms.

Sandra waited expectantly. She knew she had me. Despite my best impressions of being aloof and heartless, she knew I wouldnt be able to ignore a puppy in distress. But, just in case, she added for good measure, The mothers crying and the pups yipping. Come on, youre the only one who can help.

I often think back to that moment and wonder if things would have been different if Id been born with shorter arms. Sometimes life-changing events can be predetermined by the most incongruous of details!

The dog and her pups were in a hollowed-out kind of cave part way up the shallow sloping cliff. She had chosen a good place to have her litter, the floor was soft sand, and it was sheltered from the weather.

When we got there several other concerned holidaymakers had gathered, but like Sandra none of them could reach the pup. I peered into the darkened hollow and when my eyes had adjusted I could see it nosing blindly around. It was squeaking pitifully, but I couldnt reach it either even with my long arms.

We need something a bit longer, I said. How about a childs plastic spade? I could probably reach the puppy with that.

One was swiftly found and I discovered that if I lay down on the rocks and leaned my arm as far into the hollow as it would go I could just touch the pup with the spade. Very gently, I scooped him back towards me. A few seconds later I was able to reunite him with his mother.

She gave him a good licking to welcome him back and thumped her tail on the sand. Not that she didnt have her work cut out already. I counted 13 puppies. Some were black, but most were brown like their mother.

The scattering of holidaymakers sighed with relief and went back to what theyd been doing. For a while I sat and watched the little canine family.

I was not going to get involved. I really was most definitely not going to get involved but that night, Tony, Adam and I saved bits of meat from our dinner, and the following morning, armed with our serviette-wrapped packages, we were back on the beach.

We found ourselves at the back of a queue.

It turned out that several holidaymakers were concerned about the dog and her pups.

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