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You gotta meet
Molly...
- If
this dosen't inspire you,
nothing will. What a
great story!

Meet Molly. She's a grey
speckled pony who was abandoned
by her owners when Hurricane
Katrina hit southern Louisiana .
She spent weeks on her own
before finally being rescued and
taken
to a farm where abandoned
animals were stockpiled. While
there, she was attacked by a pit
bull terrier and almost died.
Her gnawed right front leg
became infected, and her vet
went to LSU for help, but LSU
was overwhelmed, and this pony
was a welfare case. You know how
that goes.
But after surgeon Rustin Moore
met Molly, he changed his mind.
He saw how the pony was
careful to lie down on different
sides so she didn't seem to get
sores, and how she allowed
people to
handle her. She protected her
injured leg. She constantly
shifted her weight and didn't
overload
her good leg. She was a smart
pony with a serious survival
ethic.
Moore agreed to remove her leg
below the knee, and a temporary
artificial limb was built. Molly
walked out of the clinic and her
story really begins there.
'This was the right horse and
the right owner,' Moore insists.
Molly happened to be a
one-in-a-million patient.
She's tough as nails, but sweet,
and she was willing to cope with
pain.
She made it obvious she
understood that she was in
trouble. The other important
factor, according
to Moore , is having a truly
committed and compliant owner
who is dedicated to providing
the daily care required over the
lifetime of the horse.
Molly's story turns into a
parable for life in Post-Katrina
Louisiana . The little
pony gained weight, and her mane
finally felt a comb. A
human prosthesis designer built
her a leg..
The prosthetic has given Molly a
whole new life, Allison Barca
DVM, Molly's regular vet,
reports.
And she asks for it. She will
put her little limb out, and
come to you and let you know
that she wants
you to put it on. Sometimes she
wants you to take it off too.
And sometimes, Molly gets away
from
Barca. 'It can be pretty bad
when you can't catch a
three-legged horse,' she laughs.
Most important of all, Molly has
a job now. Kay, the rescue farm
owner, started taking Molly to
shelters, hospitals, nursing
homes, and rehabilitation
centers. Anywhere she thought
that people needed hope.
Wherever Molly went, she showed
people her pluck. She inspired
people, and she had a good time
doing it.
'It's obvious to me that Molly
had a bigger role to play in
life, Moore said. She survived
the hurricane,
she survived a horrible injury,
and now she is giving hope to
others.' Barca concluded,
'She's not back to normal, but
she's going to be better. To me,
she could be a symbol for New
Orleans itself.'

This is Molly's most recent
prosthesis. The bottom photo
shows the ground surface that
she stands on,
which has a smiley face embossed
in it. Wherever Molly goes, she
leaves a smiley hoof print
behind.

Forward this and share it
with all of the
animal lovers that you know.
Send this Homepage to a friend:
God's creatures often reflect
the character we aspire to.
- A baby horse on
its mom's lap
-
There is nothing like Mom's lap
no matter who you are. This is
precious!!!!
This is a newborn offspring of
Taskin, a Gypsy Stallion owned
by Villa Vanners of Oregon.
These pictures were taken
immediately after his birth on
April 6. The mare laid down, and
then he trotted around and
crawled right up into her lap.
Talk about true love!
What
more can you say, just beautiful.
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