May 8, 2008
Photo/Photo Illustration by Pet Pulse
WOODSTOCK, N.Y. – Brooklyn is one of the last places you’d expect to find a male goat wandering the streets, but after being found there originally earmarked as food, Albie is now instead part of a loving home.
“It appeared that he had been hog tied, which is basically where all four legs are tied together,” said Jenny Brown, founder of the Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary in upstate New York. “He was probably purchased from a live stock auction and was intended for food, but he escaped.”
Animal Care and Control in New York City called Brown about Albie, and she agreed to take him. A veterinarian, however, determined that his left front leg required amputation, and Albie now has a stump there that is several inches long.
Suddenly, Brown and Albie had a special connection.
“When I was 10 years old, I lost my leg after three years in the hospital with chemotherapy,” Brown said. “So I had to have my leg amputated from the knee down.
“I did feel something really special with Albie, and I didn’t want him to go through life without the leg that he had.”
Since Brown was satisfied with her artificial leg, she called her prosthetics maker, who offered to help Albie – for free. Albie may be one of the only goats in the U.S., if not the world, to be living with a prosthetic leg.
Pet Pulse watched as Albie had a mold taken for his prosthesis by certified prosthetist Eric Tomkins, who made a house call to the animal sanctuary. For now, Albie will use a temporary prosthesis until the permanent one is ready.
“This is my goat bag,” he said, doing some show-and-tell, preparing to examine Albie on a bed of hay in a barn. “And this was Albie’s first cast when he first had his amputation done.
“Okay, relax,” Tomkins told Albie, gently massaging his back.
Tomkins applied a temporary “peg leg” made of wood, fastened to the side of his stump, serving as a brace. It’s a narrow dowel with a rubber tip at the bottom, similar to a walker for humans.
Tomkins says he’s glad to help Albie, especially considering the trauma he’s been through.
“I think the wrong that’s happening in our society, you hear about what they do with animals,” he said. “And in Albie’s case they had hog tied him, which led to the amputation.
“So it was really wrong, and I’ll try to right that wrong if I can.”
Then it was time for Albie to test his new leg.
“So let’s see how Albie does,” Tomkins said, holding out some grain, coaxing him to walk.
Finding the ideal fit could take weeks, even months. For now, though, Albie seemed to be moving well with his new attachment, even hopping smoothly onto a large rock.
“He’s actually doing great!” an excited Tomkins said.
“It took me a long time to get comfortable with my artificial leg, and be able to run and become active and do all the things I really wanted to do,” Brown said.
“And I really want the same thing for Albie.”
To support Albie and the Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary, visit woodstockfas.org.
You can also sponsor Albie with monthly payments of $25.
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One exception I know of is a chihuahua my friend adopted from the shelter. He had a birth defect, and one leg was atrophied and twisted around the good hind leg, looking like a chicken wing. I had actually spoken up for the dog, telling the shelter director that I would take him if no one else was interested. He had adjusted to dragging around his hind end. My friend adopted him, and the shelter paid for his surgery to remove the deformed leg. I can tell how much happier Oliver is, because he can move around so much better, and his lower back and the remaining hind leg are building muscle. Obviously, this surgery improved his life tremendously.
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I'm so happy that Albie was saved ,and that he found his way to Jenny Brown.When you read her story,you can't help but think it as "Fate". I could only imagine how much passion and pain that this brought up to Jenny ,and how it reminded her of what she had gone through herself.
My only concern about the whole thing is, as we've seen with other recent Zootoo stories ,it is fact that most ,if not all animals seem to do fine with 3 legs.
Once I watched a med.sized dog chasing a kitten down the street,and had to look twice and was speechless,as the dog only had 3 legs.I was stunned that he could still run as fast as he did.
ON one hand,it's nice that they want to get Albie a new leg.But what's it do for the big picture?
Animals in shelters are all ready judged very unfairly for color alone.
I think that todays society,as much as we've grown ,still put too much into "perfect" .
We cast away the pets who don't have the "look",whether it be color,or what one would say ,"flaws" Even our adults and children are still placed in specific categories because of what some would call "Handicaps"
I just worry about stories like these continuing the need for every one to think that perfection is needed in life for all to be okay.
Call me crazy,but I've always deemed myself,"Keeper of the Lost Souls". I've always come home with an animal that spoke and picked me,-no matter what they looked like.
You can not even believe how many one eyed goldfish I own,because I know that no one else would want them.
I guess what I'm trying to say,is not to judge a book by it's cover--that not all animals or people are cookie cutter perfect, that everyone,no matter what they look like will/can be loved for just them..I just worry about mixed signals ....
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