Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Saskatchewan

Dog pierced by arrow near Regina a year ago is now 'living the best life,' rescue group says

A dog that was shot with an arrow northeast of Regina one year ago has fully recovered and is happily living in its new forever home, says the group that rescued the pup.

Arrow the dog has fully recovered, says CC rezQs co-founder

The dog was found with an arrow stuck in her on a property about 40 kilometres northeast of Regina on Jan. 31, 2016. (Facebook)

A dog that was shot with an arrow near Regina one year ago has fully recovered and is happily living in hernew forever home, says the group that rescued the pup.

The female German shepherd cross was found in a community northeast of the city on Jan. 31, 2016, with large wounds from an arrow that had pierced herbody near the shoulders.

A Regina-based animal rescue group, CC rezQs, took the injured dogto a veterinary clinic in Lumsden, Sask.for X-rays and emergency treatment.

A year later Arrow, as the dog is now called, has fully recovered and is living with the family who fostered her during her recovery, said Caillin Rodonets, a co-founder of CC rezQs.

"Arrow is doing great," Rodonets told CBC's Afternoon Edition on Tuesday. "She is, to say the least, living the best life that any dog could ever live."

Rodonets said staff were initially not sure if Arrow would suffer any long-term effects from the injury, as the arrow had missed her spinal cord by mere millimetres.

"Luckily, the arrow missed everything that it could going through her. So she is running, jumping, playing; she has absolutely no long-lasting effects from this," she said.

Veterinarians said the dog, named Arrow, was lucky because the projectile shot at her missed her spinal cord by millimetres. (Facebook)

It's still not known how the dog was shot with the arrow, or if it was intentional. Rodonets said while CC rezQs initially received a photo of the dog with the arrow pierced through her body, the arrow had somehow disappeared by the time members arrived.

"By the time we had gotten out to her, the arrow was no longer in her, so we weren't able to locate the arrow," Rodonets said. "We had some people looking, but we just weren't able to find it."

Arrow's storyinspired people across Saskatchewan and beyond, who helped raise more than $10,000 to cover the dog's veterinary bills.

The money raised to support Arrow also helped CC rezQs with some other serious rescued animals around the same time.

"We tell our [donors] every penny that they donate to us, you know, we will stretch it as far as we can, and we were able to stretch that $10,000 a very long way," she said.

Arrow the dog has now made a full recovery. (Facebook)

Rodonets said seeing Arrow make a full recovery is great news for CC rezQs.

"It really encourages us to keep doing what we're doing and reminds us why we started," she said.

"With so many people that are standing behind us and ready to believe in us and help us there's no reason why we can't keep pushing forward and helping as many dogs as we can."