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Posts tonen met het label Tuffy. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label Tuffy. Alle posts tonen

dinsdag 16 mei 2017

Schitterende video en foto's van de bevrijdde moon bear Tuffy



Rescued from a bile farm, moon bear Tuffy’s happy splashing video went viral and made the world smile but that was just part of his journey.



Just over a year ago something incredible happened when Animals Asia shared footage of rescued bear Tuffy’s first dip in the pool.
Poor Tuffy had spent the previous decade in his cage, suffering repeated bile extractions for use in traditional medicine. He had been rescued months earlier and he was finally ready to step outside.
His carers caught the moment of glee at discovering the pool. He slapped the water, splashed himself, jumped up and down before finally succumbing to slipping under the water as he let it wash away his pain.
His joy struck a chord around the world. On Mashable alone his excitement was enjoyed 11 million times while his story was reported across the world’s media.
His story even saw Google searches for bear bile farm surge across the world as people sought to understand what he had been through.


But that was just a small part of Tuffy’s overall journey.
Up to that point moon bear Tuffy had endured an awful life, having suffered for at least a decade on a bear bile farm which left his body utterly broken.
When rescued by Animals Asia, he was painfully skinny with very little muscle, three of his canine teeth were agonisingly fractured and his gall bladder was riddled with gallstones – a direct result of repeated bile extraction.

Once back at Animals Asia’s sanctuary, surgery was required to end the excruciating pain in his mouth and remove his ravaged gall bladder, but with time Tuffy improved.
His wounds healed, he ate rapaciously and put on weight and eventually he went outside for the first time since being so cruelly caged a decade before.

Tuffy loved the outdoors so much that on a few occasions he refused to return to his den and stayed out there sleeping under the stars.
But every bear is a complex individual, and Tuffy is no different. He has suffered so much, and that suffering can’t be erased overnight. Although with access to friends and sunshine, Tuffy’s life has become better and better every single day.


Now Tuffy lives with 15 other bears – 15 other individuals with their own personalities, likes and dislikes. All have their own traumatic histories too.
Bringing these individuals together into one community was a long process but they are finally at the point where they trust and understand each other enough to make it work.
During that process, Tuffy was often the life and soul. He grew in confidence and initiated play with his new mates – his fun, playful side helping new members to ease into the group.


But at other times he wanted to be alone – and on a few occasions would sulk and even growl at his new friends. His past isn’t yet fully behind him.
Animals Asia’s Bear manager Sarah van Herpt said:
“We all adore Tuffy, he is such a playful bear that it is impossible not to fall in love with him. And when he’s having a good day, everybody wants to be his friend. When big Jarvis joined the group, Tuffy was right there to greet him, even though Jarvis is a full head taller than him.
“But there are also days when Tuffy just doesn’t want to do the socialising thing. He’s been through so much and at times just wants to be alone. Thankfully, the other bears in the house respect that and have given Tuffy the time and space he needs.”

Animals Asia founder Jill Robinson said:

“For many years in that cage, Tuffy must have thought the world had forgotten him but there were always people out there who cared. Now, he’s home with us, and has no idea that his innocent happiness has been an inspiration.
“He doesn’t know how much he has made us smile and he doesn’t know that his story has led millions of people to the campaign to end bear bile farming. For Tuffy and for thousands of bears like him who have suffered – we will end this cruelty.”


















donderdag 21 april 2016

Video's van Tuffy in het zwembad: 6 jaar lang leven in de hel van de berengalindustrie en nu eindelijk vrij



Dit was de hel waar Tuffy 6 jaar lang in leefde nou ja, is dit leven?

Niet vertaald sorry!!

Nieuwsbericht met dank aan www.animalsasia.org

Watch Tuffy jump for joy in his first days outside – after being rescued from a bear bile farm where he’d spent years of torture in a tiny cage.
Rescued in September last year on the same day as six other bears, Tuffy’s paws have hardly hit the ground since arriving at Animals Asia's Vietnam sanctuary.
 
 
The vet team has been working hard to rehabilitate him after years of having his bile extracted. In fact his gall bladder was so damaged it had to be removed. Examinations had found numerous gallstones, meaning he’d lived in pain for years.
That wasn’t the only surgery Tuffy faced. In addition he had three fractured teeth removed. He also had painful, dry, cracked paws.
 
Animals Asia Bear Manager Louise Ellis said:
 
“The cracked paws are common to bile farm bears as they only walk on bars, not grass. Dehydration is likely to have contributed to this too. So for his carers to see him take to the pool so quickly after he first became ready to face the outdoors was an amazing moment.
“Coming from years of little or no water, for Tuffy this must feel like a true oasis after being parched and in pain for so long. It must have felt like such a relief to have the freedom to splash around in the water after only being able to stand on the hard metal bars of the bile farm cage.”



In fact Tuffy loved being outdoors so much he decided not to return to his den in the evening – choosing instead to sleep under the stars.
There are still around 1,200 bears in bile farms in Vietnam and over 10,000 more in China. Animals Asia has rescued nearly 600 bears from the bile industry and continues to care for almost 400.
Bear bile is used in traditional medicine.
 

woensdag 13 januari 2016

Met kokend water overgoten en van 4 hoog naar beneden gegooid: Hoe gaat het nu met Tuffy? ( video )



Tuffy – the dog who battled back to health and happiness after extreme cruelty is settling into his perfect new life.
Last year Tuffy was left for dead by his previous owner in Chengdu, China – who poured a pan of boiling water over him and threw him off a fourth four balcony. Luckily, animal lover Yan Yingying rescued him and took him to Animals Asia, whose vet team saved him.

Tuffy hang out with Yan and Tan Ge the dog

Months of dedicated care later, Tuffy’s life now is just like the lives of millions of other dogs around the world – happy and much loved.

So, what’s new with this miracle dog? During the Christmas season, Tuffy received plenty of new sweaters (some from as far away as the USA!) – which he needs to keep warm, as he’s still missing fur on many parts of his body.



He also received a visit from Animals Asia UK Ambassador Lesley Nicol, who had heard his story and was anxious to meet him. The Downton Abbey star and animal advocate participated in a ‘tea party for Tuffy’ at Animals Asia’s China sanctuary, that saw the happy pup reunited with all his favourite people.



Tuffy’s been happy to share his good fortune – last seen cuddling up to a grey kitten named Lucky, who Yan also recently rescued. Yan found Lucky abandoned on the street looking sad and bedraggled. The kitten was taken in, and before long the two were playing in Yan’s apartment – and smiling for the camera.

Tuffy shares his bed with the kitten Lucky

The story of the rescue and rehabilitation of Tuffy from his life-threatening injuries became known to animal lovers across the world late last year. Alongside newspaper headlines, the YouTube movie of his ordeal received almost one million plays. 

Animals Asia founder Jill Robinson said:

“The most wonderful outcome is that the greatest gift this extraordinary dog can ever enjoy is to have an ordinary life, and that’s exactly what he has now. He’s a dog that lives without pain, has nothing to worry about and is simply loved in China. He’ll never know just how much adoration he enjoys from animal lovers across the world – or how much he inspires us all too.”

L to R: Yan Yingying, Lesley Nicol, and Jill Robinson with Tuffy
                                        



donderdag 3 december 2015

Levend gekookt vanaf een balkon gegooid en toch weer de moed om beter te worden ( video )



Boiled alive and thrown off a balcony – this is how a miracle (and miracle workers) saved a brave dog named Tuffy

U bent het inmiddels van mij gewend. Heb ik een drukke dag dan plaats ik wel een artikel maar heb geen tijd om het te vertalen. Wetende dat u in 10 landen mijn artikelen  leest weet ik zeker dat u allen goed Engels kan lezen. Geniet met me mee van dit 'wonder'

Met dank aan : www.animalsasia.org


As a six-week-old puppy, Tuffy had the shock of his young life – having a pot of boiling water thrown on him for chewing on his former owner’s cell phone.
What happened next would have killed most people. Tuffy was thrown from a fourth-floor balcony, onto concrete. 
And he would certainly have died had it not been for the “miracles of kindness” that followed.
When 30-year-old designer Yan Yingying saw him lying there, he was on the edge of death. Not thinking twice, she picked him up, determined to help.
 

Animals Asia vet Emily Drayton said:

“That first act of kindness was that of Ms Yan. She was the one who saw Tuffy lying at the bottom of the apartment building, drenched and scalded. The sight must have been so horrific – and I’m sure many people would have walked past and pretended not to see. But she didn’t. She took Tuffy to a local vet in Chengdu and paid for all his veterinary care. That saved his life.”
But while Tuffy was kept alive, the local vet’s knowledge of how to treat such awful ailments was limited. Ms Yan brought him to the vet’s every day for two weeks – but she soon saw there was no progress. And Tuffy was in terrible pain.
Through an online veterinary advice service called Pet Quest, Ms Yan found Animals Asia. She drove an hour to bring him to Animals Asia’s China sanctuary, with Tuffy held still in a padded box. Tuffy was so weak and wracked with pain, he could barely open his eyes.

Tuffy as we found him
Emily said:
“As a vet you are exposed to cases of animal cruelty and neglect. It is never something you get ‘used to’ – but after a while you can become desensitised. You learn to put your emotions aside and focus on what you need to do to help. 
“But when I saw Tuffy all of that was completely obliterated. I was shocked and sickened to my core. I could not stop the tears from rising, there was no point. Never had I seen an animal in so much pain.”
Animals Asia is best known for rescuing bears from the bear bile trade. The team has rescued over 570 bears – many of them in the most unimaginable condition, after spending up to 30 years in coffin-sized cages. 
Founder Jill Robinson has been present for most of these rescues – but she was still shaken by Tuffy’s appearance.

Tuffy as we found him
She said:
“When a vet tells you to prepare yourself, you know you’re going to be in for a shock. But nothing prepared me for this pathetic little form shivering on his towel in the recovery cage, after being brought to our hospital in Chengdu. A tiny naked pup, with a red raw body that looked like a huge blister, looking out at the world with the misery of an animal who couldn’t understand why he had been punished with pain.” 
Mandala Hunter-Ishikawa, now a vet at Animals Asia’s Vietnam sanctuary, was working in China at the time. Along with Emily, she led the rescue effort. She said:
“The big question upon seeing Tuffy was – was it too late?
“We asked ourselves – had he used up all of his energy and everything he had to get this far? Do we have to make a decision for him to end his suffering? What can we do? My colleague and I discussed it, and we both strongly felt he needed a chance.”
After the initial diagnosis, the team was faced with another difficult choice.
Tuffy with Animals Asia vet Emily Drayton
Mandala said:
“As he rested, warm and pain-free, we asked another question – do we name the puppy? Is it too early to get attached? Will he survive this?
“I thought about what he had been through. That one person’s act of cruelty led to an act of kindness by another – which led to him surviving substandard veterinary care, which to me is the worst kind of suffering. What a tough dog.
“We had to name him, and he had to survive. A tough puppy needed a tough name, so then he became our beloved Tuffy.”
The team came together around Tuffy. They balanced middle-of-the-night injections with the daily work caring for the bears that the sanctuary shelters. Little by little, he got stronger.

Tuffy in recovery
Mandala added:

“We set up a schedule and checked him every three to four hours, gave pain medication, cleaned his wounds and tended to his needs. I don’t know how he didn’t hate us – every time we touched him, it hurt.
“But within 24 hours, his eyes became brighter. And the day he ate – we all celebrated. We knew then that he could survive.”
Though his progress continued, Tuffy was in bandages for months. His elbows and knees were fused to his body from the burns, his ears pulled back – making it impossible for his eyes to close, even when he slept.
Tuffy had a lot of help in his recovery – by specialists whose expertise is as valuable as Animals Asia’s vets, donating their time just as Animals Asia’s staff did.
Dr Alane Cahalane, a specialist surgeon from the Veterinary Specialty Hospital in Hong Kong who has consulted and performed surgery on Animals Asia’s bears, flew in for one day to perform Tuffy’s first surgery – to release his fused legs as well as his eyes.
Dr Kieren Maddern, of Veterinary Anaesthesia and Pain Management Consultants, also consulted for free, with ideas on wound care and pain management for Tuffy.
As time passed, the bandage changes became easier. Tuffy became more used to them, with each one taking him one step closer to recovery.


Tuffy quickly learned that being gently lifted onto the surgery table would mean an uncomfortable few minutes as his bandages were changed. His whimpering in anticipation was especially upsetting for his carers, before the sedation took hold and he fell asleep. 
In time – as he grew stronger – he was able to stay awake through this daily ordeal. Sedatives were replaced with distracting snacks, as he grew used to the bandage changes and was able to handle them better.
Then, as he healed, the vets needed to do a skin graft – to loosen skin pulled tight by the healing scar tissue. But where could they take skin from on Tuffy’s burned body? The team found an inventive solution.
Jill said:
“Our vet team gently explained that one of the healthiest places to take the skin for the graft was from his scrotum. Tucked under his body, this had been a place where the boiling water hadn’t reached – so Tuffy was duly neutered, with nothing left to waste.
“The graft took – and soon, bearing a proud and shiny scar that joined all the other scars covering his skin, Tuffy was almost walking normally.”
Tuffy wears a hat
But the biggest part of his recovery was his spirit, urged on by the love he was shown.
Mandala said:
“In the beginning of Tuffy’s time with us, his head was the only place you could touch him without causing pain. Ms Yan would cradle his small face in her hand and coo ‘guai guai’ (an affectionate term for good), and he would wag his bald little tail and close his eyes.
“Those visits lifted not only Tuffy’s spirit, but our team’s spirit as well. As we dealt with the aftermath of such cruelty, this woman gave us our hope back, hope that there are good people willing to do anything for a living being. “
Team Tuffy
Through Ms Yan’s WeChat posts, animal lovers in China slowly became aware of Tuffy’s plight. “Team Tuffy” was born, and T-shirts were distributed to the Animals Asia vets, nurses, translators and office workers who contributed to the effort. A supporter flew from Beijing to assist Ms Yan in taking Tuffy from the hospital to her home. Friends donated to the cause and so did total strangers – Animals Asia donated all of the nursing care Tuffy received, and many sleepless nights.
In time Tuffy began eating properly. He was able to close his eyes and sleep properly. He even began playing like a normal puppy.

Tuffy smells flowers
While the China staff attended to Tuffy, others saw his recovery take miraculous shape. Jill said:
“I’ve read that people who jump out higher than the third floor of a burning building are unlikely to survive. It was a miracle that Tuffy did.
“The second miracle was the extent of his burns. When they cover over 50 per cent of the body, animals are not expected to survive. Tuffy survived with over 60 per cent of his body burned. How his life started was horrific.
“The cruelty he faced was inexcusable. But we all refused to accept that this would be a story of cruelty. Kindness and concern and love won. He refused to be beaten, and that strength was infectious. “
Tuffy will always have large patches of fur missing, and with winter approaching he needs to stay warm – so Tuffy’s friends have been making coats for him to wear. He now lives with Ms Yan, back with the kind woman that helped him start his new life. She has even invested in a wardrobe for him – making him surely China’s most stylish dog.

Emily said:
“Time and time again we find that those who are cruel to animals are a tiny minority. Animals have the ability to bring out the best in people, and it’s true for Tuffy. His strength and bravery was incredible – but Ms Yan was equally determined he would live.
“Tuffy has more passion for life than any animal, or person, I have ever met. Nothing can keep him down. He is boisterous and full of play. To say Tuffy is a fighter is an understatement. 
“But for all his toughness and his bravery, Tuffy has a softer side. Amazingly, Tuffy still sees the good in people. He still comes to us for love and warmth.
“I do not think he has forgotten what has happened, I don’t think he ever will. But he has forgiven us, and he trusts us, and I think this is the reason Tuffy is still with us today.”

Tuffy enjoys the great outdoors 1
Animals Asia’s Cat and Dog Welfare Team continue to campaign for better care for dogs and cats in China. It’s hoped that Tuffy’s story can inspire a better future for millions more dogs.