Rescue & Adoptions
Past Featured Rescues
Dino
Dino
came from a home in Brooklyn, New York. He spent the first five
or more years of his life tied to a doghouse on a concrete driveway.
His owner was an elderly man who was taken to a retirement/care
facility, and Dino was left in the care of a neighbor. The neighbor
called us and described how Dino looked, and the difficulty he was
having when he ate. Farm Sanctuary agreed to take him, but when
we saw the horrible condition Dino was in, we immediately took him
to Cornell Veterinary Hospital to run tests.
Dino's improper diet, most likely from the time he was young, led to a
condition called Osteodystrophia Fibrosa, which left him with permanent
jaw and facial deformities. This condition keeps the bones from
forming properly and leaves them soft and sponge-like. With the
extent of the damage to Dino's face, we could only stop the condition
from causing further deformity, but could not reverse the already-existing
damage. Because of these deformities, which make it difficult for
Dino to keep food in his mouth, and a diet which consisted of rice,
pasta and canned corn, he arrived at Farm Sanctuary emaciated and
stunted, looking more like a baby goat than the adult that he is.
Dino also had to receive blood transfusions, since he was so anemic,
a condition caused by the combination of a lack of food and a large
number of both internal and external parasites.
Dino
stayed on a special mash for months, since his jaw was so misaligned
when he arrived. He received calcium supplements for his bones,
and flax seed oil for his skin, which was dry and damaged. He was
bathed weekly to eliminate his external parasites, and treated for
internal worms, as well. He remained in a pen in the sheep barn
while he underwent treatment. He so obviously longed for the attention
of the sheep and special-needs goats in the barn, stretching his
head through the gate and crying when they went out onto the pastures.
Finally, after six months of intense treatments, Dino returned to
Cornell to have his bones re-tested, and to see if he was ready
to go out in a herd with other sheep and goats. The answer was a
resounding "Yes!" Dino had gone from a mere 40 pounds
to 104 pounds and his bones were finally hardened. On his first
day out with our sheep and special needs goats, Dino butted heads
and kicked up his legs as he ran, happy to finally have friends,
and happy to be a part of a real herd.
Since Dino will always be prone to fractures, he will remain in the sheep
herd with the other special-needs goats, and will live out his life
here at Farm Sanctuary. If you are interested in sponsoring Dino
or one of his goat or sheep friends, click here.
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