Winston had several hundred.
Thank goodness my boss was willing to come back to work late at night for me. Saved me a very expensive emergency bill. I owe her big time. I'm so grateful for her, always.
We put him under anesthesia and 4 of us pulled quills. It went pretty quickly. The key with porcupine quills is to get it done as soon as you can, before the quills soften or migrate, and to keep the dog from rubbing them until you can get them out. If you can do that without getting stabbed. Even the back sides of the quills are very sharp. Winston held still nicely for me on the way in.
Winston is pretty miserable this morning. Poor guy.
Meanwhile, John is on the difficult part of the Mt Adams climb right now. He sent me this before he lost cell service yesterday.
Gorgeous! I can't wait to see more.
Wow. I knew it could be bad if a dog attacked a porcupine, but hadn't seen pictures like that before. I wonder if it was a prolonged attack or if the porcupine just had a really good shot at him. Hope he feels better soon, and hopefully you won't have to deal with this again.
ReplyDeleteI think he was at it for a while. Long enough for my son to realize what was going on and run way up the hill to get him. Poor porcupine. Probably had babies to protect.
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ReplyDeleteOMG! Poor Winston! I often wonder why they say Australia is so dangerous! We have no porcupines, no skunks, no bears, no mountain lions and no rabid raccoons either! :D
ReplyDeleteI don't know, but if you believe what they say on TV, everything in Australia is deadly poisonous. :) Most of the critters here are pretty easy to live with. Wouldn't mind if the porcupines stayed away though!
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