Tails now wagging in aftermath of Superstorm Sandy

CORNWALL — A little more than four months after a literal truckload of dogs and cats was rescued in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy, directors and staff of the Little Guild were able to take a deep breath and find time to throw a thank-you party.The invitation was spread via Facebook and elsewhere. There had been just too many people who helped to keep track of them all. About 50 came to Cornwall Consolidated School March 17 for a couple of hours that was mostly about sharing stories of a real triumph.“All of you played a part, but you’re not sure where,” said Denis Curtiss, a member of the Guild board of directors, who drove the rescue truck to West Virginia and back in two days.It was true that few got to see the big picture. Most just helped in whatever way they could, from a one-time donation of pet food to months spent caring for, fostering and helping to acclimate most of 63 dogs and 25 cats into new homes.As it stands now, there are two cats and four dogs left, the latter just overcoming medical issues that kept them from being offered for adoption, according to Little Guild Executive Director Denise Cohn, who was feted with flowers and praise from her staff. The attention garnered by the early November rescue brought lots of people to the shelter, and many other animals have been adopted as well.The week after the devastating storm, Animal Friends of Barbour County, run entirely by volunteers, had suffered damage and was without power. They continued to take in animals in large numbers as the need escalated. Curtiss recounted what began as a phone call and quickly turned into an all-out effort. On Saturday, Nov. 3, a 24-foot box truck was parked in the Little Guild lot. The word was put out that whatever donations came in that day would be taken to West Virginia. In about five hours, it was filled with donations of food and bedding. Before sunrise Sunday, the 11-hour truck-and-van journey began, with Curtiss, Krista Barger, Kimberly Barbieri and Lynne Thibault. Cohn had flown on ahead to organize the rescue.“The only thing Denise asked anyone to do was to leave at 4 a.m.,” Curtiss said. “It was amazing. Everyone kind of knew exactly what to do when it was needed. We got to West Virginia. The shelter got power back two hours before we got there, so they fed us, which was great because we survived on the way down on a box of chocolate chip cookies someone tossed in the truck as we were leaving.”They spent four hours loading the animals Cohn had organized. The whole time, Hannah, a big, black shaggy dog, sat tied to a tree. Hannah got an unplanned ride to Connecticut, where she was fostered for two weeks by Gail and Jeff Jacobson in their Cornwall home. On Sunday, the couple recalled going to the shelter to volunteer to “foster only.”They agreed to take Hannah, a chow mix whose back end was shaved.“They had left a little pompom on the end of her tail,” Gail Jacobson said, “and she smelled so badly from whatever they used to clean her up. We washed her every day for the first three days. She slept the rest of the time during those first days. She was exhausted from the trip and I don’t think she had ever been inside before.”To prevent her from continually scratching her dry skin, Jeff wrapped her in a towel secured with duct tape.“We called her our pig-in-a-blanket,” he said, finding a photo on his phone.Major, the couple’s enormous rescued black Lab, totally ignored Hannah, so the two weeks until a space opened up at the Little Guild were peaceful. Hannah was adopted within a week by a Rhode Island family that had seen the rescue story on television. Curtiss made an adoption of his own. It was meant to be; he and Phlip bonded the moment Curtiss found him in front of the West Virginia shelter. As a crew of volunteers unloaded the truck in Cornwall the next day, he kept letting everyone know to not take the little Snorkie out of the cab, repeating, “He’s mine!”Snorkies are a miniature schnauzer and Yorkshire terrier cross.Cornwall Consolidated students Donovan and Noah McCray go to the Little Guild with their mom, Jennifer Kenniston, to play with the cats. “My grandparents adopted Otis, a puppy that was rescued,” Donovan said, “so we get to play with him all the time.”Jessie Bate started volunteering at the shelter during the rescue. It turned into a part-time job. Her mom, Denise Bate, adopted one of the rescues, Cooper, a hound-whippet mix who had health issues and had lost most of his fur.“Jessie would chat with people who came in and tell them ‘my mom has a great dog’,” she recalled. “A Plainville family adopted him. I cried for a week. But they send me pictures. His fur came back in. He is happy and healthy.”

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