By January 25, Tallulah had already found an adoptive home up north. On that special first evening in her new home, her adopters wrote, "Tallulah caught a few winks earlier. The house seems too warm for her but she is not interested in this snowy evening! Tallulah just licked John’s hand and is stretched out again in the den. She prefers the floor to the comfy foam and fleece beds. All good so far. Thank you!”
I always love receiving updates of the dogs that come through our care. Happy Endings remind me of why I do my job and help push though those frustrating days of high intake. Tallulah’s continuing updates were just as encouraging.
We are broken hearted to let you know that, after a steady physical and, we think, neurological, decline, Tallulah fell into a seizure last weekend, one final struggle for a lovely soul who had already suffered so much. We made the decision to euthanize her to spare her any more pain and distress, and she died here at our home.
Tallulah only had a couple of months of good health, in March and April, between the operation to remove tumor-like masses in February, to the onset of a decline due to degenerative disks in her lower back which became increasingly pronounced beginning in May. She also seemed to have an unidentified neurological issues around that time, possibly caused by a stroke. By the end, she was barely able to walk off the single step from our front porch to the front yard, and she was barely eating.
I know how much you were invested in Tallulah’s successful adoption. We hope we were able to provide here with some sense of home, love and security for at least a brief period in a life which we suspect was filled with pain, fear and loss. We are devastated, but would adopt her again in a heartbeat.
John