It is a dog’s worst nightmare. They get in the car with their human
for a ride thinking they’ll be going somewhere fun, probably the park or
the beach, but when the car stops, the unthinkable happens. The person
they trusted with their lives and who they love the most opens the car
door from the inside, shoves them out and drives off. Confused, the dog
runs after the vehicle as fast as he can but it’s pointless.
He’s been abandoned.
Unfortunately, that heartbreaking scene is a regular occurrence in
Redland, Fla., a rural community that’s become a dumping ground for
unwanted dogs.
The animals roam around unattended, struggling to survive after
spending part of their lives domesticated. Since Redland is an
agricultural area with just over 10,000 residents, the terrain is also
dangerous for the animals with snakes, spiders, insects and predators
sharing their new habitat.
“When you think about dogs living in the wild, you think of wild dogs,” says Rick Chaboudy, executive director for the
Suncoast Animal League, a Tampa Bay rescue group. “These are not wild dogs, they’re dogs living in a wild situation.”
Pictures both groups have shared of the area indeed show very friendly animals—albeit sick, clearly underfed and injured.
A (heart wrenching) video
released by Suncoast Animal League on its Facebook page shows dogs of
all sizes and breeds next to each other sharing bowls of food that the
Redlands Rock Pit Abandoned Dog Project keeps scattering around the area
to keep the animals from starving to death.
“This is real and no one is doing anything for these dogs,” adds
Chaboudy. “So we’re going to go down there and go really hard for three
days and document it so people can see this is a real problem.”
The group is taking 19 volunteers in the over four hour drive to
Redland with at least one rented cargo van, an air conditioned horse
trailer and numerous SUVs. From March 24- 27 the plan is to rescue as
many dogs as possible. A staging area will have veterinary technicians
who will perform vaccinations, heart worm treatment and any other injury
treatments (many of the dogs have been shot by locals).
Meanwhile volunteers will be in charge of bathing the animals,
removing ticks from their fur and skin, and feeding them. The more
experienced ones will join in the trapping and rescue mission.
The group expects to bring back between 50 and 75 dogs to Tampa Bay,
which Chaboudy acknowledges will help but not solve the problem.
“If we get 50 to 75 of those dogs out, to those 50 to 75 dogs, that’s
their life, it means the world to them but for the problem it’s a
band-aid,” he laments. “If people continue to go and drop off dogs and
do this, nothing is going to change.”
Both rescue groups are hoping their movement will generate enough
awareness to get the Miami-Dade Animal Services involved. Since Redland
is unincorporated, the area falls under Miami-Dade jurisdiction, but the
groups say that, after concerned citizens reached out to government
agency, it claimed to be unaware of the situation and therefore could
not do anything about it.
Miami-Dade Animal Services did not return calls from Care2 for comment.
For those who want to help the abandoned Redland dogs, Suncoast Animal League is
looking for donations to cover all the medical costs for the dogs and
volunteers to help in the current and future rescue trips the group will make to the area. The March rescue mission
will be documented on its Facebook page and Chaboudy asks supporters to share the photos with their friends to bring awareness to the problem.
Photo Credit: ThinkStock Photos
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