Sunny went home to Illinois with her new
mom, Jennifer.
UPDATE NOVEMBER 7, 1999
Sunny arrived safely in Illinois where she enjoyed
romping on two acres of fenced in land, playing
frisbee, and sleeping in a bedroom for the first time in her life.
But all is not well. Last night Sunny had a seizure and had to be rushed to the
vet...Jennifer's vet said this could be a
permanent condition caused by lack of oxygen to the
brain when her air was cut off by the chain.
UPDATE NOVEMBER 12, 1999
Letter from Jennifer:
Hi! All is well. Chloe went into the hospital
yesterday to begin her heartworm treatment. She
received her last shot today. I saw her xrays, and her heart was not enlarged, Thank God, but she did have one artery that was enlarged, probably due to the worms, so we got her in at a good time.
UPDATE NOVEMBER 13, 1999
Jennifer wrote "I brought Chloe home tonight. Boy,
was she glad to see us! Wagging her tail...very happy girl. I think she feels better already...She still has a lot more to get done.....
UPDATE NOVEMBER 27, 1999
Sad news. Sunny continued to have siezures and had to stay at the vets through Thanksgiving.
Due to circumstances beyond her control, Jennifer had to give Sunny up to Golden Retriever Rescue in
Illinois.
UPDATE NOVEMBER 28, 1999
Letter from Golden Opportunities
Sunshine officially entered Golden Opportunities'
rescue program this morning. Sunshine is now in her
foster home which does have other Golden Retrievers,
though she will not meet any of them until after she
completes her heartworm treatment program which won't be until 12/15 or so. She then will be spayed and
microchipped.
Once she gets the rest of her
medical treatment taken care of, her foster family
will begin to very slowly socialize her with very
laid back goldens to see how Sunny responds. It is
quite possible, and my guess at this point, that
Sunny is not dog aggressive, per se, but instead just unaware of how to appropriately play with another
dog. Typically very doable for us as a group and this foster home in particular - but we'll wait and see
how Sunny tells us she feels.
In the
meantime, Sunny will be getting a lot of love and
attention and she'll begin to learn the basic
obedience commmands. I have to tell you when I picked her up today, she was in much better shape than I had expected she would be. And what a delight! She is a
sweet little girl, and we will do everything humanly
possible to find out who she is and what her perfect
home will be made of. I'll try to keep you posted on
how she is doing.
Beth
UPDATE DECEMBER 5, 1999
Just a quick note to update you on little Sunny's
progress.
First and foremost, she is
absolutely ADORED by her foster family which is
composed of 2 humans and 6 golden retrievers (3
fosters, 2 fosters that were adopted, and the
family's "original" golden). Sunny has met 4 of the
goldens she lives with, and seems to have taken a
liking to the older males. She even had a very short
play session, which did her good, but had to be cut
short because of her heartworm status. Her exposure
to the other dogs has been in short intervals and
closely monitored.
Sunny is not completely
housebroken yet, but she's trying, and as you would
expect of a little girl who did not start out having
the homelife we expect our goldens to have, she is
still investigating many things in her home, and
chewing on them whether she should or not!
Sunny is not crazy about being in her crate when the
family is away and barks quite a bit to voice her
displeasure. But she's coming along, and now listens
to doggie CD's which seem to help soothe her. She
also has goldens keeping her company outside her
crate which prevents her from feeling lonely.
She is learning the basic obedience commands and I'm
sure will make everyone proud with a little more
practice.
I know so many people care about
Sunny - she's stolen the hearts of everyone who has
met her and many who have not. She is in great foster hands and we at Golden Opportunities are honored to
have been given the chance to help her on her journey to a perfect life. Beth
UPDATE DECEMBER 23, 1999
Sunny is doing fine. We had her spayed last weekend,
and she came through the spay just fine. She did
seizure again several days before her spay, so the
vets did a special procedure when they spayed her to
make it easier on her. She was back in her foster
home that same evening. Sunny is playing ok with some of the other dogs in her foster home, and is more
comfortable in her crate. She is not housebroken, we
have discovered, and so that will keep her fostered a little longer while we try to get her housebroken.
She is doing very well in her foster home...Sunny is
not ready to be adopted out yet - we aren't even sure she's on the right dosage of phenobarbitol yet, since she's had a couple of seizures. We are going to run
whatever tests we need to and will foster her as long as necessary until we feel we can give her adoptive
family a complete medical picture of her. Beth
UPDATE ~ JANUARY 18, 2000
Reba (Sunny) should hit our webpage this week. We
thought that Reba was ready to be adopted to the
right family now and started going through our
applicaitons to see if anyone could provide her what
we are looking for when just yesterday, out of the
clear blue, she had three seizures in a 12 hour
period of time. Her 3rd seizure last night took her
20 minutes to recover from. She is now at the vets
and they are monitoring her and taking more blood
samples to see if she is on the right dosage of
pheno. Her foster family expects to bring her home
tomorrow night. She hadn't seizured for us in almost
a month so we were hoping she was on the correct
dosage of pheno, but perhaps not. We also talked
about doing an MRI on her - our thoughts are that
there was neurological damage done to her when she
went through all of her abuse. Her foster parents
have noticed that after she seizes, she completely
forgets everything she's learned for quite a period
of time. Unfortunately the vets explained that when
MRI's are done, they very seldom give very useful
information - so we probably won't do one. Because
she seized again and they were pretty severe, we are
going to plan on fostering her for at least another
month. She is doing much better with other dogs in
her foster home - I saw her on Sunday morning - she
was playing with an 18 month old female and an 18
month old male. Anyway, she'll be with us for awhile
longer and we'll keep working on trying to figure out the seizures. In the meantime she is well loved and
cared for. Beth
UPDATE ~ FEBRUARY 4, 2000
Sunny (Reba) goes to the University of Illinois for testing at the end of February. We are also currently trying some new anti-seizure medications to see if we have better luck. She is doing very well with the other goldens in her foster home - she LOVES playtime!! I saw her about two weeks ago and I don't think you'd recognize the confident little wiggle-butt she has become. She is soooo happy all of the time. she is gojng to make some family very happy - once we get the seizures under control. Beth
UPDATE ~ March 6, 2000
Reba's MRI came back normal, so there was no apparent physical neurological damage done as a result of her abuse. So bottom line is she is epileptic, and may need one more heartworm treatment, but other than that, there are no medical needs we are aware of. Reba's foster mom is diligently working on housebreaking, which Reba is NOT picking up on very quickly (even though it's already been 4 months). Reba is not a quick study, but she is in the best foster home she could possibly be in and is having a blast playing with the other dogs. I see her regularly and she is just a very happy pup. We think she is experiencing now, at 18 months, what she should have experienced much earlier in her life but probably didn't. There is no need to worry about her
- we will find a perfect permanent home for her - it will just take awhile. But time is not an issue for us, and we learn more about her everyday.
If Reba is still with her foster family come June, she will begin formal obedience training. In the meantime her foster mom is working on the basics whenever she can. Reba also is hypothyroid, a very common medical condition, so she started her meds for that this week.
Rest assured, Reba is safe with us until her perfect permanent home is found!
Beth
UPDATE ~ Sunny has finally been adopted. She has been seizure free for over a year.