Diary of Dawn: Day 7-South Carolina—
Fireworks
and more fireworks
Senior Citizens and Pit Bulls;
the Atlanta hotel was full of them. Not together, the seniors
were with the “Senior Tour
Bus” and not related to the fact that the Pit Bulls were
in the building. However, I did find out that there was a Pit
Bull “Show” just a couple blocks away. They were
called Pit Bull’s by the breeders who referred to the other
chained dogs we call Pit Bulls as “Bulldogs”.
It was
ironic that every Pit Bull in the Country seemed to be in the
hotel that night. I spoke with the caretaker of Star, a beautiful
blue Pit Bull and what a sweet dog she was. Her caretaker and
his friends invited me to the Atlanta Pit Bull Convention so
I could see Pit Bulls in one building and NOT fighting. The gentleman
did say and I hear this often that this bloodline of Pit Bull
was too expensive to mistreat. He said the dogs did not live
indoors, but in kennels with heaters and air conditioners and
drains in the floor. I asked him how Star did in the hotel room
over night and he said she did well and I told him maybe this
was good training for her to start living indoors.
As soon as
we hit the South Carolina border billboards were everywhere announcing “Fireworks”! I had no idea
that South Carolina was the “Fireworks State” until
Tammy told me. We stopped at a “Crazy Steve’s Fireworks
Store” and talked to a woman about how scared dogs are
of fireworks.
I have two stories of dogs and
fireworks. The first one is when my husband and daughters were
setting off firecrackers and a couple houses down there lived
this 90 year old woman and her dog Benji. Benji was her sidekick
and never went anywhere with out Lois. Lois came over to enlist
our help finding Benji because the firecrackers scared him and
he ran off. I spent an hour frantically searching for Benji feeling
100% to blame and finally came across him just as the dogcatcher
was tossing him in the back of his truck. I did some quick talking
and left with Benji in my arms before the dogcatcher knew what
hit him. I was so relieved to drive him back home to Lois.
The second
fire work story involved a friend’s grandma,
another woman in her 90’s, who marched over to the neighbor’s
and took their little chained dog because the kid’s were
sticking fire crackers in the dog house and the poor little pup
had no where to go to escape the torture. She just went and took
their dog waiting for the confrontation and the family saw her
everyday but didn’t say a word and never got another dog.
We
pulled off into a town and met with some chained dog caretakers.
Glock was a huge and gorgeous Mastiff and another Mastiff mix
was in a pen. Glock lunged at Tammy and me so we couldn’t
get near him. Glock’s caretaker and friend were able to
get close to him and he was very submissive with them, but I’m
convinced that any stranger walking up to the dog would not have
gotten away with their life. We asked them if they were worried
about him biting or killing a child. They said no.
Tammy and I did a u-turn
to get to a large house with dogs in the yard, empty cages on
the porch. The house reeked of cat urine and we saw more dogs
inside. I offered our fencing information and the woman immediately
became irate and told me her dogs were none of my business. I
told her it was exactly my business because that’s what
we do, help people and their chained dogs. It ended with her
telling us to get off her property or she was calling the police.
We left deciding the call to the police should be from us instead
of her because something was terribly wrong at that residence,
and we suspected more of a hoarding situation. We believe she's
been reported to authorities many times before, because neighbors
on both sides had well-taken care of homes and no dogs in the
yard.
We met with Alicia Schwarz and
her amazing family. Alicia is a go-getter who is slaving away
trying to get a State law passed in South Carolina against 24/7
tethering and she is getting the job done. She took us to residences
around the area and we had a few more confrontations, it was
definitely the day for fireworks! My observation is that dog
chainers seem to be drunk by the time 6pm rolls around on a Saturday
evening and chainers are not nice drunks. We were threatened
with them putting lead in our derrières.
Anyway, when we were pulling away from chained Popeye, who I
love by the way, his owners were yelling, $50 dollars and the
dog is yours! So Alicia is going to gather the $50 and make good
on their offer. Now we just need a place to put him!
After all the
sparks of the day we needed a break from the short fuses and
ended the evening with a visit to Zeke, a handsome Great Dane
mix and one of Alicia’s happy success stories.
We spent probably an hour playing fetch with Zeke. He’s
a great dog and is looking for a forever home. I can’t
imagine how miserable it was for such a fun spirited dog to be
stuck with nowhere to run. If you’re interested in a beautiful
boy to jog and play with look no further than Zeke! You’ll
be offering him a chance at a life of happiness after his life
on the end of a chain. Contact Alicia at dogfriend@comporium.net
105
chained and penned dogs in South Carolina without even trying
hard. They definitely need a tethering limit in this state, no
question about it! 451 chained/penned dogs in horrendous conditions
by day...North Carolina promises us even more. Stay tuned!
Dawn Ashby, DDB Public Liaison Director
12 Days, 12 States, 120 Chained
Dog
Day 1: April 6th, Missouri
Day 2: April 7th, Arkansas
Day 3: April 8th, Lousiana
Day 4: April 9th, Mississippi
Day 5: April 10, Alabama
Day 6: April 11, Georgia
Day 7: April 12, South Carolina
Day 8: April 13, North Carolina
Day 9: April 14, Tennessee
Day 10: April 15, Kentucky
Day 11: April 16, Virginia
Day 12: April 17, West Virginia
We
are offering new collars and leashes for as many dogs
as we can afford, plus giving out treats and dog food
in addition to educational materials and discussions.
If you can help fund the campaign and the supplies we'd
like to deliver, it would be very much appreciated.
We
Can Now Take Donations Over the Phone at 1.877.636.1408
We
can now accept donations over the phone
using a major credit card at 1.877.636.1408.
If
you'd like to donate via regular USPS mail, you may
print out this
form in .pdf
format, and send to P.O. Box 23, Tipton, PA 1668