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Kibbles'n Bits
Dog Hero of the year 1993
This story is
from the Ultimate American
Pit Bull Terrier by
Jacqueline O'Neil. There's also
an excellent story about Weela
in Jillian Cline's new book
The American Pit Bull Terrier
Speaks...Good Dog!. Weela
was also featured in the
October, 1996 Outside
magazine as an example of the
kind of dog one would like to
have in a life-threatening
situation.
Gary Watkins,
eleven years old, was absorbed
in chasing lizards when Weela,
the family Pit Bull, plowed into
him with a body slam that sent
him sprawling. Gary's mother,
Lori, saw the whole incident and
remembers being surprised at
first, because Weela always
played kindly with children. But
her surprise quickly turned to
horror when she saw a
rattlesnake sink its fangs into
Weela's face. Somehow Weela had
sensed the snake's presence from
across the yard and rushed to
push Gary out of strinking
range.
Luckily for
thirty people, twenty-nine dogs,
thirteen horses and a cat, Weela
recovered from the snake's
venom. Luckily, because that's
how many lives she saved a few
years later. For her heroism,
Weela was named Ken-L Ration's
Dog Hero of the Year in 1993.
The press release read in part:
In January
1993, heavy rains caused a dam
to break miles upstream on the
Tijuana River, normally a
narrow, three-foot wide river.
Weela's rescue efforts began at
a ranch that belonged to a
friend of her owners, Lori and
Daniel Watkins. Weela and the
Watkinses worked for six hours
battling heavy rains, strong
currents and floating debris to
reach the ranch and rescue their
friend's twelve dogs.
From that
experience, the Watkinses
recognized Weela's extraordinary
ability to sense quicksand,
dangerous drop-offs and mud
bogs. "She was constantly
willing to put herself in
dangerous situations," says Lori
Watkins. "She alsays took the
lead except to circle back if
someone needed help."
Periodically,
over a month's time, sixty-five
pound Weela crossed the flooded
river to bring food to seventeen
dogs and puppies and one cat,
all stranded on an island. Each
trip she pulled thirty to fifty
pounds of dog food that had been
loaded into a harnessed
backpack. The animals were
finally evacuated on Valentine's
Day.
On another
occasion, Weela led a rescue
team to thirteen horses stranded
on a large manure pile
completely surrounded by
floodwaters. The rescue team
successfully brought the horses
to safe ground.
Finally, during
one of Weela's trips back from
delivering food to stranded
animals, she came upon a group
of thirty people who were
attempting to cross the
floodwaters. Weela, by barking
and running back and forth,
refused to allow them to cross
at that point where the waters
ran deep and fast. She then led
the group to a shallower
crossing upstream, where they
safely crossed to the other
side.
Stong, gentle
intelligent and brave,
Weela,CGC,TT, is the ultimate
American Pit Bull terrier,
epitomizing the best that the
breed has to offer. But her
story also highlights an
important yet often
misunderstood fact about the
breed. The Pit Bull is a dog
that loves to please its owner
and tries to become whatever
kind of dog its owner desires.
Weela has had two owners.
The first owner
dumped her in an alley to die
when she was less than four
weeks old. Her present owner,
Lori Watkins, found five
starving Pit Bull puppies
whimpering in an alley, took
them home and raised them.
later, the Watkins family placed
four of the puppies in loving
homes and kept the little female
they named Weela. They believed
Weela was special, and she
proved them right. Most Pit Bull
puppies grow up to become a
reflection of both their owners'
personality and the care and
training they receive. One can
only imagine what a different
dog Weela would have become if
her original owner had raised
her, and she had done her best
to please him. |