Saturday, July 18, 2009

Amputee dog helps disabled patients

Among Tami Skinner's three Shelties, it's easy to pick out the youngest. He's not just the smallest or the one knocked down by his brothers as they're playing catch in her backyard, but 3-year-old Dare has a more obvious distinction.

He only has two legs. A front paw and a back paw which are both located on his right side. "People ask me all the time how does he walk?" said Skinner. "He just walks. He just goes because nobody's told him he can't."



Skinner likes to tell people that Dare now stands for Dare-devil. However, the Colorado Sheltie Rescue that saved him wanted to dare people to see his face and hear his story before they would deny the reality behind the kind of puppy mills where he was born.

His back left leg was chewed off less than a week after he was born and his front left leg was caught in a cage, fractured in multiple places, and dislocated at the elbow. After receiving no medical treatment for weeks, the breeder gave him up because no one would buy him. "I can't even imagine how much pain he was in," Skinner said. "(Yet), he has the attitude, I can do anything (other dogs) can do... He has a spirit you cannot deny."



From the moment she adopted him, Skinner knew Dare's purpose transcended simply playing with a tennis ball and that her obligation to him transcended carrying him outside to go to the bathroom. They became an animal therapy team through the American Humane Association and travel the metro area to bring support, comfort and inspiration. Skinner takes him every other week to the Fletcher-Miller School in Jefferson County for special needs children. They read to the class, Dare sits on their lap, and when he starts licking them, there's not a frown to be found.

"He's just like them. He accepts them for who they are and doesn't treat them any differently because of their disabilities," Skinner said. And once a month, he visits an amputee clinic at Presbyterian St. Luke's where members share stories surrounding the loss of an arm or leg.

With news video.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Thank you so much for sharing Dare's story. A very special & beautiful dog was given a chance for happiness by you. In return Dare has given you and everyone who meets him or hears about him joy and inspiration. You and Dare are both lucky to have found one another. God bless you both.