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TARRA, her true story
"Because
it is not allowed for her to commit herself to anybody
else than me..."
"Now
the situation in here has turned out as such, that I
think something must be done...", said a totally
unfamiliar telephonecaller from the Northern Karelian
part of Finland. On an early spring evening as we had
just returned to home from a two days' -working dog trial
with our dogs. That phonecall and the horror story this
women told us started that kind of period in our family
we hope we never ever have to face again.
One year ago a little, black baby girl bouvier from our
T-litter travelled to Northern Karelia. The owner
candidate had eagerly been in contact with us all the
time before and after this litter was born. In the end we
agreed that she would give a puppy a good life with lots
of activities. The owner candidate was a young
professional farm worker who at that time had one 1.5
years old bouvier male and, as she told us, who had had a
Great Dane before that bouvier. With detailed stories she
described the training of the bouvier boy: how they had
to drive long distances to participate any training
Club's activities. They had started to train SAR and they
had tried other working dog activities too, and found
them very interesting. Now she would like to visit dog
shows as well, the male had only one testicle and that's
why couldn't take part in shows at all. So when the time
came to pick up the puppy, she came to us (some 400
miles) by train and together we tried to evaluate the
females and find the one who might do well in
conformation side, too. The new owner was pleased to the
puppy, we were happy to find an active and already a
little bit experienced home for the little one, and the
baby itself, she was smiling on her lap and ready to go.
They were happy and we were happy.
Because they live so far away from us, some 400 miles, we
were accuinted with this baby's everyday life only via
phonecalls of the owner. But she called us often telling
detailed stories about how the dogs did now cope with
each other, about how they reacted as a third dog, a
Landseer puppy, moved in, and about long walks early in
the morning, before going to work. Planning and choosing
shows to participate, wondering how to break the union
those two bouviers had together founded against the
Landseer pup...
And then we heard the breeder of the landseer had taken
the puppy back because she had not been able to pay the
whole prize of the puppy, as agreed on. And in came a new
puppy: a Great Dane baby. And all kinds of difficulties
started to emerge...
All the sudden, Tarra started to furiously break and tear
down things if left at home alone. Allthough the owner
spent lots of time with her outdoors before leaving for
work, and nevertheless she was away from home only 3-4
hours' periods at a time. We suggested taking Tarra with
her to work. She could wait in the car if it wasn't
possible for her to follow the owner to all those
different kind of work she permitted on the farm, in the
stables and in the cow-house. But no - she was convinced
Tarra would tear down the linings of the car. Such a
total change had taken place in Tarra's behaviour and
attitude towards the whole world that we suggested the
owner should consider selling Tarra back to us. She
wanted to think over this possibility. And then came this
phonecall...
Jorma jumped in the car - still filled with all kinds of
articles needed during a trial weekend - and spent the
nigh driving towards North-Eastern Finland, Karelia. At 7
a'clock in the morning he was standing outside Tarra's
home and pushing the doorbell. Nobody answered. Somewhere
inside the house a dog barked every now and then. After
waiting for two hours Jorma climbed to the window trying
to see inside the house. In an empty livingroom, straight
below the window, there sat Tarra. Totally apathetic like
a zombie. She was very, very skinny and did not react at
all to Jorma's jumping outside the window. Only after a
while it acquired to Jorma that - Oh Lord, is she tied up
somehow? It was difficult to see the dog because she was
drooping just under the window by the wall. Jorma took
off the driving mirror from our VW Kleinbus and with it
he could see Tarra being tied up to the radiator with a 4
inch chain.
And nobody came home.. So Jorma left Tarra and drove to
the police station of that little countryside village.
The local vet was not found anywhere and the local
policemen couldn't have been less interested in Jorma's
story about the starving dog, tied and locked inside one
of this village's houses. They tried to get rid of Jorma
by claiming he couldn't prove, that kind of handling of
this dog has been continuous. For a short while a slight
glims of interest emerged in their eyes as one of them
remembered to ask "Is this dog of some value in
money?". But this interest died as quickly as it was
born after Jorma had answered "Perhaps her value in
money may reach that sum a vet wants, as a reward for
euthanizing her..."
Meanwhile Piukku had made some phonecalls in Turku, too.
There is one very respected and effecient lady who has
worked a lot for all kind of animal rights here in
Finland, Mrs. Anja Eerikainen. Piukku called direct to
her. And was given a lot of hard facts and good advice
about how to proceed. First at all, the police and the
local vet are oblidged to take immediate action in case
of suspected cruelty to animals. No proving of anything
was needed, just a suspicion is enough for getting
official help to check the situation. Inside the house a
dog must be kept loose, actually it's totally meaningless
weather the leash or chain allows the dog to move across
all the rooms in the house, or weather the chain is
really short, as in Tarra's case. By Finnish laws it's
not allowed to tie down a dog inside the house. And if
there are no people in the house, the police is allowed
to break in. And they are obligated to break in for
releasing the dog from the chain. Mrs. Anja Eerikainen
gave Piukku some names and phonenumbers to contact if the
local officers still wouldn't take any action. She even
promised to personally take care of the case if needed.
Than You, Anja.
As Piukku was making phonecalls in Turku, Jorma had
returned to Tarra's home up there in the woods of
Karelia. But still only dogs were at home... It was early
afternoon when the owner came home. She couldnot axplain
in any ways her actions with Tarra. Nearby the house
there was a school and the children were having a break
with their teachers. Jorma asked the teachers to witness
Jorma buying Tarra back to us. So, Jorma had just bought
a birthday present for himself. On that day he became 39
years old, but felt a whole lot older...

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Tarra
has just returned home
on the 6th of may 1991
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On the next night Jorma & Tarra
were back in Turku. Almost 30 years I have had dogs and
all the time I've been active in all fields of the
kennellife. But not even in afternoon papers' news
flashes have I seen nothing like Tarra. On our backyard
there was a squating sceleton whos face and image seemed
to begg for forgiveness all the time. She didn't have any
coat, her fur was strangely made of something like short
pieces of rope here and there in her body. Her right eye
was covered with messy greenish fluid caused by an
aggressive infection, and the left eye was not to be
seen... there where you should see the eye was a thick
shag binding the ear and the eye, and the whole left side
of her head tightly together in one half-head package.
She couldn't stand straight. Her front legs were almost
laying on the ground because her nails were so long that
her angles were bound on the ground. Jorma's one hand's
fingers reached around her waist. She was terribly dirty,
carcass-like smell followed her even out of doors, and
did turn our stomacks upside down. On the backyard she
cripled on my lap and her tail, thin like a little baby's
finger, swifted. I started to cry and carried her to the
sauna and tried to gently wet her with a warm shower. She
started to hysterically drink the water. She had already
drank a whole can of water Jorma had in the car and
during the night, by the Tuesday morning, she drank some
6 liters of water. As we visited our vet on Tuesday she
warned us that this heavy drinking of all fluids might
continue for several days. All the fluids of Tarra's body
were so dangerously dried that Tarra would have dryed up
to death - if not starved - in only a couple of days.
There were more moments of horror to came. As I tried to
clean up Tarra's head - with that warm shower - I slowly
and carefully tried to separate the hairpackage across
the left eye. At last all the hair was loosely hanging -
but there was still no eye to be seen! I literally
collapsed and screamed Jorma for help. We continued the
cleaning up for ages and ages, and in the end we could
see the eye deep down on the bottom and covered with
thick inflammated eyelips. Those eyes we will never
forget. All the time she looked at us with that one still
functioning eye having so a gentle, almost devoted look
and she tried to stick on us so closely and tightly and
totally as possible.
We were told that Tarra had been living in that 4"
chain continuosly. She had been tied up like this and
left alone in that sitting position for example for two
and a half days. During those long days she could not
move at all, she got no food or water, she couldn't go
out, but had to sit there in her own urine. She had spent
the Christmas Evening in a closet, once again tied up to
a sitting position and this time also forced to wear a
muzzle. As a neighbour visited the house and wondered why
in heaven's name, this sweet, gentle bouviergirl had to
sit there in the dark alone, the owner explained that
"She must stay there, because it's not allowed for
her to commit herself to anybody else than me".
Sick, insane words from a lunatic's mind, of which there
was no sense to be found, but only dark curses of wild
demons to catch.
Later we were told that this young women had already had
some 20 dogs in three years time. Many of them returned
to their breeders because of the unpaid prize of the
puppy. Tarra was paid by instalments but stricktly by the
schedule we had agreed on. Most of the dogs lost their
mind and/or legs and were sold further on. Just like a 7
months old Doberman who became furious and unpredictively
aggressive and was sold as a guardin dog to some poor
bastard who knew nothing about animals, not to talk about
dogs. All those detailed stories about training SAR and
being active in all kinds of other local
kennel-activities were significant products of a rich and
colourfull imagination of this lunatic.
Even the stories about working on a farm were just
imagined, actually she had not been working at all during
Tarra's presence. In fact, she was living with the help
of our social wellfare system. Nobody has ever seen her
on training fields, etc, etc. All, frequently heard, long
and detailed stories concerning herself and her dogs were
just fairytales...
As Tarra returned home to us she was like a giant,
7-weeks old spider-puppy. The whole world was uncovered
and new. She was not acquinted with furniture. She walked
as well on the table as on the floor - once she simply
walked through the bookshelf as the lower shelves were
empty... She did not know how to walk on a leash. She was
motorically very undeveloped - speed she had, but not the
skills to control her movements. She never barked
eventhough we had at that time five adult bouviers who
never left us uninformed if a visitor or his car came to
our door. She did not know how to play with other dogs or
what to do with balls and all kind of other toys. She had
spent her childhood tied up to a radiator.
before Jorma left to Karelia after that scary phonecall
we had made an agreement: If there are any possibilities
Tarra's recovering from the horrors of her life, Jorma
would bring her home to Turku. If the real world would
have been like an endless nightmare to her, if her fear
for life should have been overwhelming or already
transformed to aggressivity, it might be right to show
some mercy on her and let her fall asleep for the last
time.

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Lot's of holding and
hugging,
lots of medical care
and good food and Heureka,
a newborn bouviergirl is
about to start smiling!
(after 2 weeks at home again)
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For the rest of my life and from the
bottom of my heart I will respect that dog. From all
those experiences I wouldn't have survived, so thoroughly
and in such a short time. From the very first moments in
Turku Tarra was so touchingly gratefull of all the
attention we paid to her. Her eye, and later on both eyes
were filled with warm and honest friendlyness. She tried
to please us in all the ways she could imagine and in
spite of the rudeness the world had shown to her, she was
very curious to find out all the miracles she had not yet
met.
During the first week she literally slept on Jorma, and
as Jorma went out of doors without Tarra she tried to
follow him through a closed window. She was afraid of
sudden quickly movements and loud noises. On the yard we
couldn't throw any balls etc. to our other bouviers
either: Tarra started to kneel down on our legs and her
eyes begged "Don't, please, don't... I'll
surrender." She was afraid of puppies and she was
afraid of children. But that's all. In one afternoons
time she learned to love toys. She was always ready for a
walk and would have walked round the Scandinavia if she
were allowed to. She enjoyed participating in training
field's happenings, and didn't even react to shooting.
Jorma took one week off the work for avoiding Tarra's
leaving alone and for being able to take care of her,
feed her every 3rd hour, give her the medicines etc.
After that we "worked in turns", Piukku left
home early in the morning, came to pay a visit during
lunch hour and returned also early. Jorma left home aerly
in the afternoon and returned late from work. With this
system the periods Tarra was left at home without us were
short and everything went ok. During the fourth week one
visit at lunch time was enough for her. We had returned
to our normal routine schedules.
After one month, different kind of medicines had done
good job for her wellfare and all those specialfoods
given often but in small quantities, had given her
strength so that she didn't look like an anorexia -
patient, it was time to start thinking of her future.
Living with us would mean sharing our attention with five
other adult bouviers.Until now we had concentrated in
healing Tarra, introducing a much more beautifull world
for her than that she had been used to. But much more
richer life she would have in a family where there
wouldn't be so many dogs as we already had.
She was the very best friend of Yka, her litterbrother we
had left home, and she clearly enjoyed doing everything
with us. She was totally silent, mute when she came back
to us, but now she reacted immediatelly to her name, to
words like "good" and "no". She knew
perfectly well the contents of words "food",
"wait", "jump in", "up",
"sit", "down", "brush". So
where from could we find a new home for a dog who needs a
lot of attention and love, at least not at the moment
isn't able to handle any kind of pressure, but is very
eager to participate in everything her people are
involved in.
Tarra spent two months with us. Just like she did after
her birth. At the age of eight weeks of her new life she
left us for her last and best home. She moved to Vaasa
and started her life as Mrs. Marina Lovgren's dog. Thank
you, Marina. She didn't miss us, she wasn't feeling sad
or missery. She had another litterbrother, Ritsa (N.
Tavarits), waiting for her with Marina. And she got the
best possible Ma' with a warm heart and lots of caring.
And a gentle mate who was just thrilled about an own
girlfriend and who took a role of a perfect gentleman
letting Tarra to decide when to do what, with whom and in
which way... Ritsa was an excellent therapist for Tarra
by backing her up in everything she decided to do!
The unknown caretaker who phoned us should be rewarded as
an example of brave and responsible citizenship scarcely
found. She had to work hard to find us; somehow she
managed to get Tarra's breeders name, then she had to
call to Finnish Kennel Club (our phonenumber was not in
the phonebook; after this episode it has been there!) to
get our number and it was the fourth time she was calling
to us as she finally managed to reach us at home!
Gratefully and humbly we can only wish this kind of brave
citizens will be found to help all the other Tarras there
most certainly are here and there in the world.
During the first days in Vaasa it was impossible for
Marina to go anywhere without Tarra, but very quickly
Tarra believed that this Mam and this bouvierbrother will
stay and be always there for her. She follows her
litterbrother to the trainingfields, in the woods, to the
seashore, to the summer-cottage. She is master in
swimming and diving, escaping to the woods with all the
toys in her teeth and laughing at his brother "Try
to catch me, try to catch... I'm faster than you and I
have all the toys with me!". May the Lord have mercy
and let this episode be the one and only we have to face
with such cruelty in humans beings focused to a helpless
puppy.
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