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I’m
not sure how I should start this story or even how to put it into
writing to express my feelings of horror, grief and depression. It
is just too painful to think about, but if I can, it may help me
comes to terms with it. To be blunt, I thought I had killed
Sarah!
It happened very late on a Thursday night
(1st December 2005) on a return journey from Adelaide -
2.00am-ish to be precise. I should preface the next paragraph by
saying that our driveway is about 700m in length (¾ km) and is
frequented by an assortment of wildlife, especially at night.
Needless to say, at that time of the night the last 700m home is a
bit of a risky business and I am always extremely careful of
what’s lurking in the shrubbery at the side of the track and
especially that year as it has been a very wet one, so the growth on
the trackside shrubbery had just gone berserk and was very dense.
Anyway, we had almost reached the house
and, as usual I was driving at walking pace and saw two of our
wombats (Barrelbum and Wombles) off to my right in the gloom of the
extremities of my headlights and at that precise moment the front
left hand side of the car gave a lurch. I stop instantly, got out
to see what I had run over, but saw nothing. I saw nothing
before, during or after the lurch although Jan thought she saw
something dash off into the darkness. Barrelbum was still
standing watching us, as was Wombles. I then saw Chunky (another
of our handraised wombats) looking at us from a distance as if to
say “what’ve you got for me” but no sign of Sarah. My
immediate thought was that I had run over her, but as I had not seen
or heard anything, I could not be sure, even though I had that nasty
sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach.
The following morning I checked the spot
in daylight and only found a single scratch mark on the drive (from
what could have been a front paw) and some fresh tracks to a warren
entrance some distance away which looked like a wombat running at
speed.
By the following Saturday I had not seen
Sarah since the day before the event, which in itself is unusual, as
she is usually the one animal who is out most often and always
wanders up to you looking for a handout. She is often spotted
during the day sunning herself at a burrow entrance. I could not
help but assume that I had run over her and she had taken off to the
nearest burrow to die a miserable death from who knows what sort of
horrific injuries. At the time I could not say for sure that it
was Sarah, but not having seen her for two days is MOST unusual.
You occasionally hear of these terrible
accidents of parents who, through no fault of their own, reverse
over a child in their driveway – I now know exactly how they
feel.
Sarah was like family – correction Sarah
is family! I would look out of the front room
window where I would often see her lying about somewhere. Now all
I could see was nothing! I had the feeling that I may have to live
with this for the rest of my life and I was not sure how to cope
with it! This may sound silly but I find talking to people about
this sort of thing, difficult. I have no-one to blame but myself
and I thought perhaps that by putting it into writing, it might make
me feel better. Try and imagine if you had run over your favourite
pet, how you would feel. The worst part was that not only did I
think I had killed her but she had been carrying a baby in her pouch
and Lord knows how that had fared. If she had been mortally
injured and was lying low somewhere I might have been able to take
the joey and hand raise it if only I could find her. But at that
stage I still didn’t even know if it was her – I had no evidence,
apart from her disappearance.
They say thirteen is unlucky for some –
not for me. Thirteen days after Sarah’s’ disappearance I went
across to our wombat enclosures with four buckets in my hands, one
for each feed dish. I emptied the first one into a dish and then
stood up and turned around to walk to the next one and there was
Sarah!!!!! Standing quietly behind me!! I didn’t know whether
to laugh or cry! As I turned she walked very slowly towards me and
I could immediately see that she had lost a lot of weight and she
had this enormous swelling around her neck. The first thing I did
was to check her pouch to see if she still had her baby – she did,
and it moved, so it was still alive more to the point SHE
was ALIVE, and better yet - she was hungry.
The lump under her neck was so huge she
could not eat out of the feed dishes
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we provide. The side of the dish kept
getting in the way and it was obviously painful because when she
tried to eat the lump would foul the side of the dish and she would
recoil in pain.
I then tipped her food on the floor so at
least she could reach it. She got stuck into it straight away with
great gusto – she must have been starving.
Whilst she was eating I stood there
looking at her trying to decide the best course of action. My
immediate thought was to catch her up and take her to the vet but on
reflection, not knowing what sort of internal damage she had
sustained I was concerned that if I picked her up I would cause more
damage. I knew she would kick and struggle if I tried to do that
and she was no lightweight, despite her obvious weight loss. I
guessed she was probably around 25kgs and she should have been
closer to 30kgs. So I decide to err on the side of caution and
leave well alone and to ring our Vet to ask for her advice. I
thought perhaps she could provide me with some injectable pain
killers and anti-inflammatories without having to subject Sarah to
the trauma of being manhandled (or should that be person handled?)
and then transported to the Vet’s surgery. Now I had sighted her
at least I could keep an eye on her and watch for any changes to her
condition and administer any drugs without the trauma of carting her
about.
Our Vet was more than happy to help out
and I picked up the drugs the following Monday. But ‘Murphy’ and
his pesky law came to spoil the picnic. Sarah disappeared again
and I was unable to administer any of the drugs the vet had provided
me. I waited and waited and walked across to her enclosure at all
times of the day and night but she refused to put in an
appearance. She was somewhere underground in one of her extensive
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burrows. She eventually
surfaced again on the Friday two days before Christmas (that was
twenty three days after the event). So now I had no choice. I
had to catch her up and confine her to somewhere convenient to I
treat her. I had to be able to have access to her on a daily
basis and put in a place close to the house where we could
administer the antibiotics.
We set up a ‘hospital’ room in our Pug
and Pine Cottage (an old building next door to our main house).
This being December, our summertime, the
temperatures had become very hot, not unusual at that time of
year. It was not too bad in the cottage but it was not air
conditioned and somewhat open to the elements. I was a bit
concerned that the warm weather would have a detrimental affect on
Sarah’s recovery and she was not too impressed with it either and
started to show
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signs of distress. (Wombats will start to
overheat and become distressed in temperatures over 35C (95F)).
There was nothing else for it but to take her into the main house
under the air conditioner. She immediately parked herself in
front of a personal fan we had placed on the floor to draw cool air
from one room to the other.
At this stage we had been through all the
antibiotics that the Vet had provided but poor Sarah was not showing
any signs of improvement. The vet had also given me some very large
needles to hopefully relieve the pressure that was obviously
building up inside this swelling under her chin. These needles would
make the most needle hardened person tremble with fear – they were
huge but certainly did the job. We had to use them to puncture
the swelling and relieve the pressure – not an easy or pleasant job
and you should have seen the stuff that came out – Shudder!!!!
Despite all this treatment Sarah still
did not show any signs of improvement, in fact she was getting
worse. The swelling was increasing in size, was as tight as a drum
and obviously becoming more and more uncomfortable.
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Christmas came and went. I rang the
Vet immediately after the Christmas, New Year break and told her the
story and suggested to her that we should bring Sarah to her to have
this swelling looked at – opened up if necessary. She agreed.
We transported Sarah to the Vet in one of our wombat boxes and left
her, and the box, with the Vet. She took one look at Sarah’s
swelling and was horrified. She said it would definitely need to
be opened up and that she would operate the next day.
It was now over four weeks since
the ‘event’. At that stage we did not know the extent of the
problem and our Vet was concerned that Sarah may have ruptured her
windpipe or oesophagus. We had this nasty feeling that she would
not get through the operation particularly as our Vet went to a
great deal trouble to impress upon us that she might not survive the
procedure, especially if there was damage to the oesophagus and
infection was being continually sourced from any foodstuffs that she
consumed by leaking into the cavity beneath her neck. Apparently
any small rupture of the windpipe or oesophagus could be nigh on
impossible to find. It would only take a very small hole to cause
this sort of problem. We left the surgery with heavy hearts and
feelings of trepidation.
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The next twenty four hours were very very
long indeed.
The following day our Vet rang just
before she started the operation to tell us just that i.e. that she
was about to start; but needed to be reassured by us that if she
found any major problem what should she do? She needed affirmation
from us as to whether to press on or to euthanase, knowing our
finances were limited. Silly question really! This was around
3pm. I told her to proceed but to ring if she came across
anything that could be classed as terminal. Two hours went by and
we still had not heard anything and were starting to worry but then
no news was good news (or so I believed). Knowing the surgery
normally closed at six I said to Jan that if she hadn’t rung by six,
I would ring her. Six o’clock came and went and I paced up and
down waiting for the phone to ring but kept putting off picking it
up myself. It eventually rang at about twenty past six. I had
dived on the ‘phone before the end of the first ring. It was the
Vet (of course). She said the operation had gone reasonably well
and that Sarah was in recovery. She had removed over a litre of
blood, puss and foul smelling fluid from Sarah’s neck but could not
find any rupture of the oesophagus or windpipe so the prognosis was
reasonably good, although not out of the woods yet. We heaved a
collective sigh of relief and lived to fight another day. All
this time Sarah had still maintained her joey in her pouch.
Then came the daily donkey work. We had
to irrigate and clean Sarah’s
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wound daily as well as give her
another round of injections for another ten days. By the end of
that time she knew exactly what was coming when Jan picked her up
and I walked towards her with ‘something’ in my hand. Despite
this she was amazingly good and never once attempted to bite anybody
and her joey was growing in size and seemingly unaffected by all the
traumas Mum was experiencing.
We were now well on the road to recovery
and she was starting to enjoy herself exploring the house and
generally making a nuisance of herself. She
would dive into the clothes basket in the
bedroom and there was the night she
leapt on our bed at 3.30 in the morning,
following which, we kept her locked
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up in her box overnight. An experience
she seemed to cope with very well and slept very peacefully all
night (as did the rest of the household).
Mind you, we did let her roam around the
house during the evening and at the time we were handraising two
orphaned Western Grey Kangaroo joeys (Wallace & Grommit) and she
would insist on walking up to them to investigate – something they
were not too sure about.
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By now we had removed the drain in
Sarah’s neck and the hole was beginning to heal but I did not want
let her go back into her enclosure until it had healed completely
for fear of something getting into it and the infection
reoccurring. However Sarah had other ideas. She would sit on the
lounge and look out of the window as if to say “Please can I go
home” but eventually gave up and settled down for a doze.
However, the time was obviously getting
closer to her being reacquainted with her own home.
And so the day eventually arrived and
after examining her neck, even though it had not healed completely
we let her return to her enclosure under her own steam. The day
was the 23rd of January which was seven weeks following
that fateful day. After that the house seemed somehow empty
despite the fact we still had Wallace & Grommit to care for.
Below I have reproduced a series of
photos of Sarah making her own way back home which say it all
really. She was obviously pleased to be back in her own
environment and her joey survived well and at the time of writing
has vacated the pouch and has been ‘parked’ somewhere underground
where Sarah will protect it for some weeks to come. I hope
sometime not too far into the future she will bring it to the
surface and allow us to see it.
Sarah is a very accommodating animal and
is always happy to checkout any newcomers (either human or non
human) without any fuss. To date, apart from the occasional
friendly soft nip, I have never known her bite anybody. But, I
guess there is always a first time!!
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Is
this the way out? |
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I
remember this |
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This is where I got run-over |
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Nearly home |
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Thanks for all the help |
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See Ya! |
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