About Me

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Mumbai, India
I'm a landrace dog fancier. Founder of the INDog Project (www.indog.co.in) and the INDog Club. Before that, I worked with urban free-ranging dogs of Mumbai from 1993-2007. Also a spider enthusiast and amateur arachnologist.

This blog is for primitive dog enthusiasts. It is part of the INDog Project www.indog.co.in. Only INDogs (India's primitive indigenous village dogs) and INDog-mixes (Indies) are featured here. The two are NOT the same, do please read the text on the right to understand the difference. Our aim: to create awareness about the primitive landrace village dog of the Indian subcontinent. I sometimes feature other landrace breeds too. Also see padsociety.org

Monday, June 30, 2014

Rosie

Beautiful elegant Rosie was rescued as a pup from aggressive humans in Ahmedabad. She has been living with the kind Roychowdhury family ever since. 

Her rescue story sent by Kalyani Roychowdhury:
























Rosie, her siblings and mother lived on the lawn of my former housing society. 

When we and the other residents first discovered them, everyone seemed happy, and I got full support from the other families. 

They would play around, and then the other residents started threatening them and us, for we and another family used to take care of them. They started to pester us because we showed love to the darling little puppies.

Two of the puppies succumbed, one to a road accident, the other to gastroenteritis. In fact Rosie almost died of the disease but my daughter got her checked, and then we brought her home and decided to keep her till she recovered. At that time we didn't intend to adopt her as we didn't want to curb her free-roaming nature. 

But then her mother passed away from symptoms that looked like brain haemorrhage, though I blame mankind for her death. 

We released Rosie again to be with her brother Blackie, but the residents started to threaten that they would poison both pups. 

My daughter ended up shouting and fighting with them, and almost stopped studying. She was in the eleventh grade then and in the science stream, and needed to study. My husband was absolutely against my daughter's stand, though I started supporting her. 

We got Rosie neutered, but we still had no intention of keeping her as a pet. Our pet cat's death had been very heart-wrenching and we didn't want a repeat. 

However fostering both the dogs became inevitable when the residents reached their peak of verbal assaults. So Rosie joined our family permanently. Her brother Blackie also lives with another family. 
























We have bought ourselves a house, in a society way better than the previous one. Though there are people who are not really fond of her, the number of Rosie-fanatics is higher here. She also won my husband's heart! She eagerly waits for him to return from work in the evenings. 

Rosie is three years old now. 

She has a very noble personality, is playful, and loves guests (though she is suspicious in the beginning). My daughter is her best friend and she goes totally crazy when she comes home from college after months. She is very particular about what she eats, and loves to go out for walks. 

She is the apple of our eyes. 

I have a daughter; but Rosie is my other daughter.


























Story and photos: Kalyani Roychowdhury
Ahmedabad

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Thursday, June 26, 2014

Rani's story

Rani is a very special dog with all the grit and adaptability Indies are known for. Read about her remarkable journey from the streets of Delhi, through shelter and foster care, to her final home with doting owners Janneke and Rick Scholtes in the Netherlands.  



Written by Rani's friend, Sara Casapulla:


Rani was an ownerless INDog-mix aged between seven and nine years, living on a very busy road in south Delhi, fed by Good Samaritans passing by and slum dwellers living on the same pavement.

She was happy, even though she didn't have a roof above her head. She had freedom and enjoyed watching cars and people passing by. 


Till one sad day...it was late at night, and Rani was sleeping in the street as usual, when a speeding car hit her. 

Rani was screaming in pain, and two animal rescuers happened to pass by at that very moment. They picked her up immediately and took her to an animal shelter nearby. 















































She had a fractured leg. The vet put a simple bandage on it and decided to keep her at the shelter till she recovered. She was put in a cage with two other dogs. Rani was a wise dog and adjusted to her new environment immediately, though she didn't like other dogs. 

























Days passed, and Rani was still in that cage...her leg not healing at all. 

I was paying visits to her regularly and decided to help her, as she didn't seem to be recovering at the shelter. I showed her to my vet who said that sadly it was too late; her leg would not heal any more, and she had to live with three legs for the rest of her life now. 

I couldn't put Rani back in the street as it would have been too dangerous. I didn't want to leave her in a local shelter to finish her life either. So I decided to foster her until she found a caring family who would love her for the rest of her life.

She was sharing my small flat in Delhi with my two Indies Maya and Chicca (also rescued from the streets in India), and she was very happy to have someone caring for her, as she was an extremely affectionate dog. Unfortunately I was moving back to Europe and I could not bring her with me as I already had Maya and Chicca. Being alone it would have been difficult to have three dogs, specially with a full-time job and no help at all. So I left her in the loving care of two friends staying in Delhi who kindly offered to foster her, while I tried to find her a new home.
































The separation was very difficult for both of us as I had got very attached to her. But I knew if I didn't find her the perfect family, I would have adopted her, once settled down in my new life in Switzerland. However I didn't want to give up and contacted all the animal rescues I knew and asked them for help. 

Finally a very well-known Dutch association, AAI, which homes street and abandoned animals from different countries (mostly Spain and Turkey) with loving families in the Netherlands, took up Rani's case.

Once all the certificates and vaccinations to travel were ready, a volunteer from the rescue flew from Amsterdam to Delhi to pick Rani up, and together they flew to the Netherlands!

It was a very long journey and Rani did not like the change in the beginning. She found herself with strangers in a very cold country and it took her some time to adapt. A dedicated volunteer fostered and nursed her back to health, waiting for the perfect forever family to come forward.


Forever family!
































And one fine day a couple of Dutch animal activists, Janneke and Rick, saw Rani's picture on the association's website and instantly fell for her! They had always kept rescued animals. When they met her at her foster home they decided she would be part of their family along with their rescued cats. 

Rani was very happy to go with Rick and Janneke even though it took her some time to adjust to the two cats (she would normally chase them). But fortunately (and how!) Rani spends the whole day with her dad, as she is allowed to go to his work place with him! They go to his office together by bike; she has a special carrier and loves to sit inside. 
























While dad works - he is a consultant for sustainable building - she does the easy life, sunbathing by the window, sleeping on her pillow or getting petted by his colleagues! 

























On weekends she goes to the sea or to the forest with mum and dad. 






















She recently went to Luxembourg with them and when she was too tired to walk, she would be carried comfortably in a backpack!



Rani has also attended two training courses which she passed successfully and has received two diplomas already! She will soon start a third course as she seems to enjoy the classes and  learning new things.



Rani's rescue is a real miracle as she could not have found a better home. 

She has also planned a trip to Switzerland this summer to meet her old friends from India: Maya, Chicca and me!

Story: Sara Casapulla
Photos: Rick and Janneke Scholtes, Sara Casapulla

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Friday, June 20, 2014

Worth a thousand words: Dogs, by Prashant Godbole

I love all of Prashant's photography but most of all his images of street animals: mysterious, evocative and compassionate. 

I asked him whether I could share some of his dog photos and he immediately said yes.

You can see more of his beautiful work in his website. 

I shared one of his most brilliant photos on this blog earlier - click here.

Thank you again, Prashant!






























Images: Prashant Godbole
http://prashantgodbole.com/

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Saturday, June 14, 2014

From Puffy's photo album

Beautiful Puffy turned ten on May 1. 

This lovely lady was featured on the blog four years ago. So another post is long overdue!

Some photos of her over the years, from her album. It was very hard to pick just a few.





In 2004, and in 2012
The prettiest Santa

From 2007
'Oh no, am I being recorded?'

'Soooo embarrassing!'

Tugging a sock with her ball knotted in it



Photos: Lakshmi Ravishankar
Pune

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Friday, June 13, 2014

Splash...?

We all want our Indies to love the water as much as we do. But sometimes they just don't! 

Some snapshots of watery outings with Indies, from this summer:

1. Ginger on Nagaon beach. "I'll admire the sea from here, thanks."















































2. Grumps being dipped in the water. NOT amused.
































































3. Tippu watching Sajoy swimming in a pond with friends..."Oh no, those evil men are going to hurt my human..."
























"Don't know how to swim, but I've got to reach Sajoy and save him..."
























"Reached! He's safe! Yayyy!"
























4. Tequila is fascinated by the movement of water. She'll go in only with company, and then enjoys romping around, though she hasn't started swimming yet.

































































5. Tommy hates water!
























He'll just get his feet wet, but no more.
























6. You can see which member of the K Gang likes the sea, and which one does not.
























"Can we go back now?"






Photos: Aditya Lele, Vidya Samik, Sajoy Peter, Rajvi Mariwala, Monique G Nerman, 
Rajashree Khalap


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