Pie
Age:
Location:
Size:
Sex:
Date of Upload:
Coat Length:
5-6 months
Masoura, Dakahlia, Egypt
Large
Female
Jan 3, 2025
Short
Dogs
Cats
Kids
Very Reactive
Not tested
Not tested
Activity Level:
Potty Training:
Medical Needs:
Needs a lot of physical exercise, Needs mental stimulation, Playful
Not potty trained, Other
Needs to be spayed/neutered
Extra Needs:
Experienced adopter
Vaccinations:
Microchip:
Spayed / Neutered:
Unvaccinated
No
No
Ready to Travel:
She can be transferred to Cairo.
Pie is a 6-months-old rescue pup. She is very energetic, clingy, and very funny enjoys sniffing her environment, sometimes eat it. To my surprise, if she got her paws on some paper or a book, she won’t actually eat it but shred it apart. Not like any of the pups I have dealt with, a very clean girl. When I found her, she was hit by a car, suffered a broken pelvic joint, and a few breaks in the pelvic bone. For this to improve, her movement needed to be restricted, so I placed her in a secured area, and she wouldn't poop until I scooped her up away from her feeding bowls and blankets to the floor. I placed pee pads across from her, but it didn't work on motivating her to do it anywhere close to where she slept.
Eats very fast; puzzle plates will be needed to slow her down.
I don’t know what caused her reactivity exactly, but when I took her, she was between three to four months, and spent most of her time with her mother as I have seen. Then I took her to a boarding place where she stayed in a crate, then she continued in a room, so not a lot of contact with other dogs or animals, which might’ve been a big contribution to her reactivity. I currently have other dogs, where I’m forced to keep her in a room due to not having a good separation system. I go sit with her for a while or take her to the roof to play, but more than that is hard, and no dog deserves to live like this.
More about her injury
I took her in October after she was hit by a car, suffered a broken pelvic joint, and a few breaks in the pelvic bone. They fused on their own after two to three months of medications and restricting her movement. She now walks, jumps, and climbs the stairs with a limp.