Thread: Take that!
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Old 05-02-07, 17:52
Vets Dottir
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Default Dorothy is going home!

Hey folks, that skunk that hitched a ride has found a hitch-ride home to USA again ... after having been named DOROTHY while here (from the Land of Oz ) ... I can just see a new best selling children's book on the market soon about "The Adventures of Dorothy Skunk - Smuggled into Canada - Illegal Alien Skunk Gets Deported"

Quote:
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNew...hub=TopStories

Dorothy the Skunk finds ride home to California
Updated Mon. Feb. 5 2007 9:28 AM ET

toronto.ctv.ca

A skunk that has been stranded in Toronto for a month after hitching a ride inside a California transport truck is finally going home.

The stinky animal has been given the name Dorothy because "she fell asleep and woke up in a strange land."

Two employees from radio station Live 105.5 FM near Los Angeles have offered to return the striped animal, whose tale has touched many of their listeners.

"We heard the story and we felt like we wanted to help. Our hearts went out to this little black sheep," host Trace Nealy told CTV's Canada AM on Monday.

"Actually, if she were a sheep, she would have had it a lot easier."

Volunteers from the Toronto Wildlife Centre offered to help co-ordinate the skunk's return to its native environment, but airlines and trucking companies refused to carry the animal because of its smell.

On Monday, Nealy and her producer, Ryan Miller, began their 5,000-kilometre voyage back to California. The pair are taking time off work to perform the good deed.

They said they aren't worried about what could happen inside their RV along the way, despite knowing skunks can project foul-smelling spray as far as 10 feet.

"We've been assured by the Toronto Wildlife Centre that skunks... are not prone to spray unless they're really, really scared," Miller said.

"So we're just going to do our best to not jump in there and shake her cage."

The skunk didn't spray while riding in the back of the transport for seven days until she reached the Toronto area.

Dorothy wouldn't likely be able to survive with Canadian skunks and laws prevent her from being released here.

Nealy and Miller will be documenting their adventure and giving their listeners daily updates.

Nealy said she has rescued other animals in the past, including stray cats and dogs, and even a squirrel that she took care of for years.

She described Dorothy as "adorable."

Nealy and Miller will be taking a bit of a detour along the way.

"We're going to stop in Kansas too, just for nostalgia," Miller said.
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