7/6/01 Van Nuys, California - In a remarkable tale of
friendship among animals, a blind lap dog in southern California has its own
guide dog - a German shepherd which refuses to leave his disabled pal's side,
according to a report on Saturday.
Foot-sore, their fur matted, the two strays wandered
into a suburban Los Angeles neighbourhood last week, with the larger dog
carefully nudging the smaller one to prevent her from blundering into traffic,
said the report in the Van Nuys Daily News.
"It's the most amazing thing you've ever
seen," said Van Nuys resident Barbara Fiero, who took the dogs in and named
them Samson and Delilah. "The big one wasn't going to let the little one
get hurt."
Fiero's neighbour June Malecek, who lives across the
street, first spotted the two dogs last Sunday.
"You could tell they had been walking for a
while," Malecek said. "Their tongues were hanging out and the big
one, he seemed really weary."
Malecek set out a bowl of ice water for the dogs, but
Samson would not go near it until Malecek backed away. Then he used his snout
to guide Delilah to the bowl and let her drink first.
As the dogs slurped away, Malecek managed to get the
attention of Fiero, an unabashed animal lover who already owns a dog, five cats
and 13 birds, plus a tank full of fish.
Talking in a low, soothing voice, and being careful to
keep a safe distance, Fiero eventually coaxed the dogs into her fenced-in back
yard.
Avoiding canine confrontations
There they took up residence in the plastic igloo
doghouse that belongs to Sparky, Fiero's Lhaso Apso, who now lives inside the
house to avoid any canine confrontations.
When Delilah snoozes inside the doghouse, Samson
lounges outside the entrance, keeping guard.
Fiero and Malecek can only guess at whether the dogs
have always lived together, or struck up a friendship as they wandered the
streets of Los Angeles.
A veterinarian subsequently said Delilah's eyes are
clouded black by cataracts and ringed by dark layers of rheum, and she suffers
from ear mites. The time on the road dirtied her white fur, and Samson's black-and-beige
coat grew unkempt.
Fiero, 58, who works at the Los Angeles Pet Memorial
Park, admitted that she "sort of" hopes both mutts are homeless so
she can keep them.
"Working at a pet cemetery, you always see
animals when they've died," she told the paper. "It's nice to see a
couple of dogs up and around."
Fiero has gained Samson's trust to the point where he
now allows her to pick up and carry Delilah around the back yard. But the big
dog never goes far away, prancing at Fiero's heels as she holds Delilah, and
sometimes rising up on his hind legs to get a better view of his pal.
He also remains wary of strangers, watching them
closely and letting out a few deep barks if anyone other than Fiero or Malecek.
- Sapa-DPA
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