Angel the adorable puppy found tied up in a dog food bag with wire and dumped in a bin along with six siblings is adopted by her rescuer
A little dog and his seven siblings were found abandoned inside a bag of dog food. Nicole Olsen and Ella Harper went to investigate after hearing multiple screams coming from the dumpster at the truck stop.
This time, the unusual event occurred on November 1, while driving through Murray, Australia, between Wiggly Flat and Kingston.
Nicole lifted the lid of the bowl after hearing the groans and discovered two 40-pound bags of dog food stacked on top of each other.
The bags were secured with rope to hang clothes, and the dogs were outside in desperate need of help. While returning from a family gathering in Renmark, Nicole decided to call her family members to help her deliver the puppies.
Small bones
He appeared to be in poor health. They were infested with sponges and fleas, and the purpose of abandoning them was evidently to ensure their extinction. Nicole’s cousins responded by dividing the children into three vehicles and taking them to Nicole’s home in Gawler.
The sickest pups were covered with aprons and stroked throughout the journey to keep them awake.
When they returned home, they notified the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) in South Australia, and the puppies were removed and taken to a veterinary clinic. Unfortunately, one of the sickest passengers was unable to complete the flight, and the other had to be killed due to his critical condition.
The remaining six puppies, three boys and three girls, were all flea-infested, sponge-infested, and dehydrated, and all were meticulously treated.
The RSPCA chief inspector said, according to the Daily Mail
“This situation represents the height of monster horror. We have no idea how long these pups have been there because they were discovered by cohabitation.”
The inspector went on to say that the person who did this did not want any of the puppies to live because he had left them in a similar deplorable state. When they were discovered, the temperature had reached 25 degrees Celsius, turning the concrete bowl into a terrifying fire for the children.
Tykes, unlike humans, cannot sweat and must rely on panting and heat exchange through their feet and limbs to keep warm. As a result, cooling was extremely difficult for the young children trapped inside the food bags and ship.
The good news started rolling in after RSPCA volunteers nursed the six surviving puppies back to health.
Nicole and her family decided to borrow Angel, who stands out among the other pups because he’s the only one with a bone.
Which is red and full of love.
Nicole had the following to say:
“We all had a soft spot for Angel because he was young and seemed to flounder a lot.”
Her family had hoped to borrow all of the puppies, but she told them that wasn’t possible, so they settled on borrowing at least one.