microchips: February 2011 Archives
*****Update 2/23: I received this email just a little while ago from Curly's owner:
Curly has been found! She was dropped off at the Downey Animal
Shelter by an anonymous Good Samaritan! We are very glad and grateful
to have her back. She's a bit traumatized but happy to be back home.
Please keep your eye out for Curly, a dog who is nearly 20 years old, deaf and has very poor vision. She walks with an "odd gait," the owner said, because she's had a stroke.
Her owners live in the 100 block of South Prospect Avenue in Redondo Beach and she's been missing since last night (Monday, Feb. 21). Fliers have been posted around the neighborhood.
From the owner:
She does not have her collar but is microchipped. She was last seen
on South Prospect Ave. about 1/2 block north of Torrance Blvd. Her
vet is Dr. Christina Hutson at Animal Hospital of Redondo Beach.
Let's get this baby home!
Call Carla at 310-849-3295.
Curly has been found! She was dropped off at the Downey Animal
Shelter by an anonymous Good Samaritan! We are very glad and grateful
to have her back. She's a bit traumatized but happy to be back home.
Please keep your eye out for Curly, a dog who is nearly 20 years old, deaf and has very poor vision. She walks with an "odd gait," the owner said, because she's had a stroke.
Her owners live in the 100 block of South Prospect Avenue in Redondo Beach and she's been missing since last night (Monday, Feb. 21). Fliers have been posted around the neighborhood.From the owner:
She does not have her collar but is microchipped. She was last seen
on South Prospect Ave. about 1/2 block north of Torrance Blvd. Her
vet is Dr. Christina Hutson at Animal Hospital of Redondo Beach.
Let's get this baby home!
Call Carla at 310-849-3295.



Daily Breeze reporter Donna Littlejohn has shared her homes with a succession of wonderful, funny, and occasionally difficult canines -- Muffin, Fritz, Ellie, Mercy, Pilgrim and now Cowboy, an Australian shepherd-border collie, and Tess, a border collie. From strong-willed terriers to weirdly obsessed Australian shepherds, they've invaded her world with boundless energy, wet noses, muddy paws and soggy tennis balls. But they've really brought so much more than that -- like laughter and joy, some unexpected life lessons, and more than a few tears along the way.
Josh Grossberg grew up with the usual array of animals: goldfish, dogs, hamsters, parakeets and turtles. He now owns the loudest dog in the South Bay(