The story appears on

Page A6

January 4, 2015

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Feature » Animal Planet

Funny, heroic pets leave lasting memories

IT was the year of the family pet behaving badly: A dog got sick from eating dozens of socks and a puppy took the rap for driving the family car into a pond. Angry cats held their owners hostage on at least two occasions.

A review of the oddest animal stories of 2014 also offers numerous examples of less-than-virtuous human behavior. There was the hapless burglar whose criminal career came to a crashing halt when he left his Facebook page open in a house he was accused of robbing. And don’t forget the Texas man who went to jail for urinating on the Alamo.

To be sure, many tales from the animal kingdom this year were by turns heart-warming and hilarious, and more than a few came out of the Golden State or the Sunshine State.

A parrot that spoke English with a British accent went missing for four years, only to return to his California home speaking Spanish and asking for someone named Larry.

The bird’s owner, one Darren Chick, said he had no idea where his Nigel spent his time away, but aside from the language switch, he is doing just fine.

“It’s really weird,” Chick told the Daily Breeze, a Southern California paper, recalling the happy reunion. “I knew it was him from the minute I saw him.”

For sheer heroics, it was hard to top the family cat that rescued a California child pulled from his bike by an attacking dog. A video of the encounter went viral, and as a reward, the fearless feline was invited to throw out the first pitch at a minor league baseball game.

It could have been worse for the German shepherd puppy that knocked a car into gear and jumped on the gas pedal, driving the vehicle into a pond where it sank. The dog survived.

Same goes for a hearty Great Dane that had 43 socks removed from his stomach in emergency surgery, and a golden retriever found in California’s Tahoe National Forest after apparently surviving nearly two years in the wilderness.

But at least two cat owners may have wished their pets went missing. In California, a family feline terrorized two women, trapping them in a bedroom for hours and forcing them to call police. In Florida, a tabby held its owner captive, and the woman later admitted she may have stepped on the animal, prompting the outburst.

A solution to bad feline behavior was suggested by a story about a 120-pound Burmese python found lurking in the Florida underbrush. The discovery likely solved the mystery of what happened to all of the cats that disappeared in the neighbourhood.

“It’s the answer to so many questions,” said Pamela Dinola, who lost five of her seven cats.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend