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Flying on Eddie's Wheels:For Special Needs Animals - P1/2
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So you can see that it’s
a joy to have these dogs
because it’s really hard
to feel sorry for them.
(They’re full of life.
They’re just full of life.)
I know
they’re just full of life.
Hallo,
warm-hearted viewers,
and welcome to
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
On today's program
we’ll travel to the quiet
hills of Shelburne Falls,
Massachusetts, USA
to visit a company
that greatly enriches
and improves
the lives of disabled
animal companions.
For the past decade
Eddie’s Wheels
has been manufacturing
wheelchairs for animals
with disabilities, thus
transforming their lives.
They sell over 2,000 carts
per year with customers
in the US, Greenland,
Australia, Namibia,
South Africa, Indonesia,
Iraq, United Arab Emirates,
Armenia, and a number
of European nations.
Founded by Eddie
and Leslie Grinnell,
the company builds
a wide array of carts
custom- designed to meet
the animal’s specific needs,
abilities and anatomy.
While most of
the company’s clients
are dogs, Eddie's Wheels
has also supplied
wheelchairs for cats,
goats, sheep and
even a pot-bellied pig.
Ms. Grinnell now explains
how the business
was inspired by
their beloved Doberman.
Twenty years ago,
we had a dog.
She was a Blue Doberman
and one morning
she woke up paralyzed.
I high-tailed it to the vet
with my paralyzed dog
and was told
that I had two choices:
A US$10,000 back surgery
with a 50% success rate
or to euthanize her.
Neither of those options
worked for me,
so I brought her home,
and I was on the phone
with my husband telling him
what our options were.
And the dog was listening
and she started barking
at me from her bed
by the wood stove,
and she definitely seemed
to have an opinion
about euthanasia
that we should take
that option off the table.
So he came home
a few days later and
consulted with our vets
about how to make her
some kind of a mobility
cart or a wheelchair,
because she weighed
80 pounds, and
carrying the back end of
an 80-pound dog around
was hard work for me
and wasn’t giving her
much of a life.
So he looked at
the skeleton of the dog
and said, "We’re going to
support her
in a bio-mechanically
sound way”
and design and built
the first “Eddie’s Wheels”
wheelchair,
never thinking that
this would be a business.
This was something
he was making (Yes)
for his own, individual,
wonderful dog.
So she used it
and just as the carts now
it supported her
under her pelvic floor
and had a yoke
over her shoulder blades.
And she went for walks
every day
through the woods.
She took six months to heal,
but after six months,
she started walking again
on her own
and that was our story.
So we thought
a miracle had happened.
But our vet said,
“Well, what you did
was you kept her alive
long enough
for her spinal injury
to heal on its own.”
So this gave us
a huge insight into
an animal’s ability
to heal and
that the important thing
was to give them
a good quality of life
while healing took place.
One thing we did know
from our experience
was that there were
many people
who had been faced
with the same sort of
critical decisions that
we had been faced with.
People would stop us
on the street and say,
“Where did you get
that dog wheelchair?”
and proceed to tell me
about the heart-rending
story of the dog
that they put down
only because of a disability,
not because of an illness.
Ten years passed
before Eddie decided
to leave his job
as a mechanical engineer
and start a cart business.
The Grinnells soon realized
that their decision
to start the enterprise
was right for them.
Everything seemed
to fall into place.
And then there were
so many synchronicities
that told us
that we were on a path
that we needed to follow.
We would be
sourcing materials.
We would tell people
what we were doing.
People would
extend credit to us.
Our metal supplier had
a policy at his business
of allowing dogs
to come to work.
When he found out
what we were doing,
he made sure that
we always had metal
and he would deliver
two sticks at a time, (Wow.)
no minimum order, (Yes.)
and drop it off at our house.
So we were given all of
these very encouraging
signs from the universe
that this was something
that we were supposed
to do.
Through the years
the Grinnells have heard
many wonderful,
heartfelt success stories
about dogs who could
become active again
through use of
their wheelchairs.
It fills them
with great delight
to know they are helping
so many disabled dogs
to lead happy lives.
This cart was built
for a dog named KD.
KD was actually
a neighbor’s dog.
It was the first cart
we ever got paid for.
And KD became disabled
when she was about six,
had an unsuccessful
back surgery,
and as she aged
her spine curved
more and more and more.
So this was her last cart
and we made a cart
that conformed to
the curvature of her spine.
So this is
our scoliosis cart.
So her hips were here,
(Oh, dear.)
her body was here (Yes.)
and she used this cart for
the last year of her life
and she died at 16.
I have pictures of her
chasing a red kickball
down the street.
She lived a block away
from where we did then
and she would race
behind her red kickball
in her wheelchair.
Initially, Eddie’s Wheels
manufactured only
two-wheeled carts,
but over time they’ve
developed four-wheeled
carts for dogs
who are quadriplegic
or who have
only one working leg.
The first full-quad cart
that we ever built was
at the behest of a woman
who had a 90-pound
Basset Hound who had
had a devastating injury
to his cervical spine. (Right.)
She had gone and had
the US$10,000 surgery
and the dog came out
of surgery with
only one functional leg.
(Oh, dear.)
But she loved that dog,
Jake, and she said,
“He is not in pain and
he can hold his head up
and he can bark at me
and boss the whole house
around, and I need help;
I need something
better than a red wagon
to give this dog
a quality of life and
to give me quality of life.”
So she drove out and
brought him out to us.
We took measurements
and Eddie designed
a fully supportive,
quad cart for a dog that
would have a headrest
and a toe handle.
And this was one of
the first times
we saw that miracle
of what happens
when you posture a dog
(Right.) because we put
him in the quad cart
and all of a sudden
he started reaching with
one of those back legs
that we thought
was completely paralyzed.
And at the end
of a few months
he was actually able to
move that cart
with one rear leg
and one front leg.
They sent me postcards
of him on the beach
in the outer banks with
his big Basset Hound ears
flapping in the surf
and this big, doggy smile
on his face.
He lived another two years.
But it was a quality of life
issue for both of them
because she could
put Jake in that cart,
take him outside and
he could walk around
in the yard.
All that barking
had been going on
because he was anxious
and knew he was helpless
and he calmed down
and became a calmer,
happier dog because
she could tow him
around the house
and keep him in sight and
he could feel like he was
her companion dog again.
The first carts
built by Eddie’s Wheels
were for injured
or paralyzed canines.
But after several years,
the Grinnells learned of
dogs who were suffering
from degenerative diseases
that gradually affected
their mobility and decided
to help them as well.
Dogs get this disease
called Degenerative
Myelopathy, which is
the canine version of ALS
(Amyotrophic Lateral
Sclerosis).
It’s a devastating,
autoimmune,
muscular disease.
And we started
collaborating
to build mobility carts
for these dogs.
Because
what would happen is
that they would slowly
lose their ability to walk.
And over a period of
usually six to nine months
they would go from
hearing the toenail
scraping on the sidewalk
to having a dog dragging
itself across the floor.
And it was incredibly
tragic news for me
to hear because
I was used to thinking
I was going to create
miracles for everyone;
all the dogs
would walk again.
But this is a disease that
dogs do not get better from.
So then our task became:
“Well, how do we give them
the best quality of life
for as long as
they are here
and design carts
that would serve
their progressive needs?”
So we have.
And by working with dogs
with DM
(Degenerative Myelopathy)
we have come up with
a line of carts that goes
from the early stages
of the disease to hospice.
We can engineer a cart now
that will take care of it.
The dog at the beginning,
when their front legs
are still strong,
that cart can be upgraded
as the disease progresses
forward and we can take
weight off the front end.
We can put
temporary front wheels
on a cart so when they
cannot stand anymore
they can still be stood up
to eat and drink normally.
(I see.) And at the very
last stage of their life
they can have
a full quadriplegic cart.
Leslie and Eddie are the
caregivers of four doggie
family members,
Sweet Pea, Daisy, Willa
and Webster, all of whom
have their own sets
of wheels to keep them
rolling through life.
Join us again tomorrow
on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants for
our concluding segment
on Eddie's Wheels,
where we’ll meet
these charming dogs,
whose vibrant, joyful lives
are a testimony
to how Eddie’s Wheels
has bettered the lives
of thousands of
companion animals.
For more details
on Eddie’s Wheels,
please visit:
Thank you for joining us
today on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Coming up next is
Enlightening Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News,
here on
Supreme Master Television.
May all lives be filled
with everlasting freedom,
peace and dignity.
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